The Jerusalem Post

Hungary announces boycott of Durban conference

- • By LAHAV HARKOV

Hungary has become the first EU country to announce it will not attend this year’s UN event marking the 20th anniversar­y of the World Conference on Racism in Durban, which featured antisemiti­c messages.

“The Hungarian government declared a zero-tolerance policy against antisemiti­sm and is fully committed to guarantee the safety of the Jewish people that we also consistent­ly represent in the internatio­nal fora,” Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjártó wrote in a letter to Mark Weitzman, director of government affairs at the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles.

“In this spirit, Hungary does not support the Durban process and voted against the resolution adopted by the United Nations General Assembly on 31 December 2020 deciding on the convening of a high-level meeting on the occasion of the twentieth anniversar­y of the adoption of the Durban Declaratio­n and Programme of Action,” he wrote.

The 2001 World Conference Against Racism is also known as Durban I, after the South African city in which it was held. It was a hotbed of antisemiti­c and anti-Israel messages and was where the accusation of apartheid against Israel was popularize­d.

An early draft of the resolution adopted at the Government­al

Conference at Durban equated Zionism with racism, leading the US and Israel to withdraw from the conference. The final draft did not condemn Zionism as racist, but the Israel-Palestinia­n conflict is the only one listed specifical­ly under the section on “victims of racism, racial discrimina­tion, xenophobia and related intoleranc­e.”

The NGO Forum at Durban approved a resolution calling Israel a “racist apartheid state” and accusing it of genocide.

Antisemiti­c materials, including The Protocols of the Elders of Zion, were distribute­d at the event.

Durban conference secretary-general Mary Robinson refused to accept the document over the language, saying that “there was horrible antisemiti­sm present.”

The US did not participat­e in the Durban II and III follow-up conference­s in 2009 and 2011, respective­ly, because the original conference “became a session through which folks expressed antagonism toward Israel in ways that were oftentimes completely hypocritic­al and counterpro­ductive,” president Barack Obama said in 2009.

Israel, Canada, Italy, Australia, Germany, the Netherland­s, New Zealand and Poland also boycotted the conference. In 2011, for Durban III, the number of countries boycotting rose to 14.

Last week, the UK said it was joining the US, Canada and Australia in boycotting Durban IV this September, “following historic concerns regarding antisemiti­sm.”

France is also expected to pull out, a diplomatic source said last month, but it has not yet issued an official statement. A German Foreign Ministry official said Berlin had yet to decide on the matter.

Earlier this month, Ambassador to the UN Gilad Erdan said he plans to hold an alternativ­e event to the Durban conference that will deal with combating racism, including antisemiti­sm.

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