Become a Member
Opinion

Hateful legacy of the other twentieth anniversary

The United Nations' Durban Conference sought to delegitimise and destroy Israel

September 17, 2021 13:59
durban GettyImages-51392821
CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA: Thousands of Muslims took to the streets in Cape Town 21 August 2001 to protest against Israel's continuing oppression of Palestinians. The march, organised by the Muslim Judicial Council, comes ahead of the World Conference Against Rascism which begins in Durban at the end of the month. (Photo credit should read ANNA ZIEMINSKI/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

It is now 20 years since the UN’s World Conference on Racism convened in Durban in an effort to delegitimise and ultimately destroy the State of Israel in a nice, not-at-all racist way. This dismal 20th anniversary has been overshadowed by that of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, which has occasioned an outpouring of op-eds reflecting not only on what was taken from America but also on the liberties and credibility that were squandered in the War on Terror.

The UN is marking the Durban Conference’s anniversary by holding another conference when the General Assembly meets next week. The event is called “Durban IV”. The mathematically inclined will correctly infer that the Jews have already been slandered at Durbans II and III, and are in for it again, in the nicest possible “anti-racist” way.

When Durban II met at Geneva in 2009, the only head of state to attend was that lover of peace and justice, Iran’s president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. He expounded on the “totally racist” nature of the world’s only Jewish state in his speech, and talked of “the abuse of the question of the Holocaust”. The version of his remarks given to the press by the Iranian delegation referred to “the ambiguous and dubious question of Holocaust”, which suggests someone had massaged his words for the sensibilities of the UN.

To their credit, the British and European delegates walked out at Geneva when Ahmadinejad began talking. To the shame of the FCO, the UK was not among the ten countries that had boycotted Durban II’s circus of bigotry entirely. None of them had walked out of Durban I, either. When it became clear that this was the biggest festival of Jew-hatred to be held in a free country since Kristallnacht, only the US and Israel withdrew.

To get more from opinion, click here to sign up for our free Editor's Picks newsletter.