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By Saeed Shabazz
NEW YORK (FinalCall.com) - Unhappy with the Obama administration’s decision
not to attend an April meeting of the Durban Review Conference, which is
connected to an international race gathering, activists plan to hold a
Harlem rally to protest the action and urge the U.S. to participate in the
important meeting.
“We want to get the message to President Barack Obama and his administration
that we are demanding U.S. participation in Durban II,” Roger Wareham, of
The December 12th Movement, told The Final Call. The rally and a press
conference are set for March 21 in front of the Adam Clayton Powell Jr.
State Office Building. The four-day Durban Review Conference begins April 20
in Geneva, Switzerland, and is an outgrowth of the 2001 World Conference
Against Racism, which was boycotted by the Bush administration. Controversy
arose over demands for reparations for Blacks and anti-Zionist positions
that offended Israel at the 2001 meeting in Durban, South Africa. The review
conference, dubbed “Durban II,” will evaluate progress toward goals to
eliminate racism set in 2001. Significant United Nations conferences are
often accompanied by parallel conferences with advocacy groups and
government officials.
The Obama administration announced Feb. 27, through a State Department
spokesman, that no delegation would be going to Geneva. The spokesperson
said a report back from State Department envoys said the conference’s draft
document “had gone from bad to worse.” The administration believes the draft
document is “unsalvageable” because of language that demonizes Israel,
reconstructs free speech rights and highlights a call for reparations for
slavery, the spokesperson added.
President Obama, in a break with his predecessor, had sent a delegation to a
preparatory meeting for the review conference on Feb. 19. UN
Secretary-General Ban Ki Moon and human rights groups such as Human Rights
Watch welcomed the decision. “The U.S. cannot provide the leadership
necessary to promote and protect human rights by sitting on the sidelines,”
said Kenneth Roth, Human Rights Watch executive director, at the time. Dr.
Susan Rice, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, told reporters Feb.
19 it was “critical to show the world that we are willing to engage in a
global platform to denounce the remnants of slavery and colonialism.”
Days later, the administration’s position shifted to an emphatic rejection
of the conference. The State Department spokesman left a window open, saying
the U.S. “would be prepared to re-engage” if deliberations were based on a
text that met various criteria—including not singling out “any one country
or conflict.”
As of March 2, President Obama was reassuring Jewish groups that the
administration was still holding fast to its plan not to attend Durban II.
The right wing Heritage Foundation March 4 said the president’s decision not
to participate was a “welcomed recognition of the limitations of
multilateral engagement.”
Lawmakers representing the Congressional Task Force on Anti-Semitism
applauded the decision as did the chairman of the House Foreign Affairs
Committee who predicted the administration’s announcement would push nations
sitting on the fence not to attend.
On March 12, the Italian foreign minister announced his nation would not be
attending. A week before the Dutch foreign ministry withdrew, saying “the
document is unacceptable.” IRIN News reported March 2 that Australia was
still uncommitted on whether it would boycott, while the 27-member European
Union was attempting to get all of its members not to attend.
“One-hundred and sixty nations participated in the 2001 WCAR, and they
approved an outcome document declaring the trans-Atlantic slave trade and
colonialism as crimes against humanity,” said Dr. Conrad Worrill, chairman
of the National United Black Front, and a reparations advocate.
“Also included in the Program of Action was the resolution that the remedy
for the repair of these acts was reparations. And if President Obama is not
sending a delegation, he is out of step with the world and the United
Nations; and he will suffer the consequences of a political embarrassment
because of the backwardness of his action,” Dr. Worrill added.
Cynthia McKinney, former Green Party presidential candidate, participated in
the 2001 conference as the head of the Congressional Black Caucus task force
for the World Conference Against Racism. She explained to a radio audience
listening to WPFW-FM’s Jazz & Justice Show March 9 that she also felt the
administration was out of step on Durban II.
This “certainly calls for self-mobilization of the African American
community to get the president’s attention and to let him know that the U.S.
must attend this review conference,” she said.
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