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IDEOLOGICAL CEASE-FIRE OR SELL-OUT AT DURBAN?

August 31, 2001

MID-EAST REALITIES © - www.MiddleEast.Org - Washington - 8/31: It's not likely this is the end of it, but indications are that the Arafat crowd -- as of the moment still in the pay of the U.S., Israel, and the despicable Arab "client regimes" -- has found a way to back away from the badly needed ideological confrontation, with the help of non other than that slimmy man for all seasons who never misses an opportunity to interject himself Jesse Jackson. But just as on the streets of Seattle, Quebec, Genoa, and soon Washington -- those who are free and determined to speak their minds and stand for something other than cowardice and expediency may not be finished. Indeed, let's hope they are just beginning.

PALESTINIANS AGREE TO DROP CRITICISM OF ISRAEL AT RACISM CONFERENCE
By CHRIS TOMLINSON, Associated Press

DURBAN, South Africa (August 31, 2001 10:57 a.m. EDT) - The Palestinian delegation has agreed to drop criticism of Israel and Zionism in a final declaration for the U.N. conference against racism, the Rev. Jesse Jackson said Friday after meeting with Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat.

Jackson said Arafat had agreed at the three-hour meeting to oppose efforts to criticize Israel and Zionism, and to recognize the Holocaust as the worst crime of the 20th century.

The Palestinians were not immediately available for comment.

Jackson presented reporters with a handwritten draft of the document signed by Arafat in which he said he did not want the U.N. conference to derail over criticism of Israel.

The racism gathering has been overshadowed in part by anti-Israel language in a draft of the conference document. The United States decided not to send a high-level delegation to the conference because of negative references to Israel and the Zionist movement. Shortly after making the announcement, Jackson spoke to Secretary of State Colin Powell by telephone to explain the statement Arafat had signed.

Jackson criticized the Bush administration for not sending Powell, noting that he was able to resolve the controversy simply by talking to the Palestinian leader.

ACRIMONY SURROUNDS RACISM SUMMIT

[BBC Online - Friday - 31 August, 11:58 UK]: A UN summit against racism has opened in South Africa with a call not to let the main issues of racial intolerance and xenophobia be drowned out by the wrangling which has dominated preliminary talks.

Six thousand delegates from more than 130 countries are attending the start of the eight-day gathering in the port of Durban, with the intention of forming an action plan to tackle racism.

But the issue has already exposed deep divisions, in particular over Israel's treatment of the Palestinian people, which prompted Washington to decide against sending a high-level delegation.

Opening the proceedings, UN Secretary General Kofi Annan warned that any failure to agree on an anti-racism formula supported by all would "give comfort to the worst elements of society".

But success "after all the difficulties... [would] send a signal of hope to brave people struggling against racism all over the world".

Mr Annan said the wrongs perpetrated against the Palestinians should not be ignored - but all societies had to confront intolerance.

The event began with a performance by dancers from the Ballet Theatre Afrikan dressed in costumes from around the world, followed by a minute's silence in honour of the late anti-apartheid campaigner and father of the current South African president, Govan Mbeki.

Mr Annan said there was no place more suitable for the conference than South Africa - "a country that was "synonymous with racism in its vilest form but is now a beacon of hope".

The Middle East issue is probably the most contentious issue confronting the conference, but rows have also arisen over demands for reparations for slavery and the Indian caste system.

South African President Thabo Mebki said black and brown people around the world had high hopes for a conference to tackle the "consequences of slavery, colonialism and racism".

But BBC diplomatic correspondent Barnaby Phillips says that message is undermined by the absence of any important leaders from the US and Western Europe.

As the conference was getting under way, thousands of demonstrators marched towards the venue to demand action on a variety of related issues.

The marchers assembled three kilometres (two miles) from the conference centre, chanting "a better world is possible".

Most were South Africans demanding redistribution of land, but they also included supporters of the Palestinians, migrant workers and the Dalit, India's untouchable caste.

The US, Canada and Israel have all limited their representation to mid-level delegations in response to "offensive" language towards Israel in the draft declaration, although any equation between Zionism and racism has been dropped.

"We felt that our presence there on a higher level would legitimise this terrible effort," Israeli Deputy Foreign Minister Michael Melchior, who had been due to head his country's delegation, said in Jerusalem on Friday.

Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, who is expected to deliver a speech to the conference, has said the plight of the Palestinians should be treated as a global issue.

"No doubt it's one of the most serious problems now, which not only Palestinians are facing, [but] the whole world is facing," he told reporters.

Arab and Islamic states have been pushing to have Israel singled out as a racist state similar to South Africa before the collapse of apartheid.

Jewish groups attending a parallel NGO forum have meanwhile complained of harassment and discrimination after a news conference they held to denounce anti-Semitism was disrupted by shouting and singing from anti-Zionist activists.


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Source: http://www.middleeast.org/articles/2001/8/371.htm