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JHRC Calls on UK Government to Withdraw from Durban II in Light of Ahmadinejad Participation

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

UK Foreign Secretary David Miliband held a series of telephone calls with representatives of the Jewish Human Rights Coalition (JHRC-UK) on the eve of the much-anticipated Durban Review Conference last Friday afternoon.

In three separate conversations, Henry Grunwald QC (President of the Board of Deputies of British Jews and Chairman of the Jewish Leadership Council), Lord (Greville) Janner of Braunstone QC and Jeremy Newmark (CEO of the Jewish Leadership Council) took the opportunity to underline the full extent of communal concern around the conference.

It was made clear to the Foreign Secretary that there is deep discomfort at the prospect of the UK Government remaining engaged in the process given the continued uncertainty around draft text related to the Holocaust and the continued Iranian resistance to the inclusion of robust clauses on Holocaust commemoration.

Moreover, in addition to the draft text, the Foreign Secretary was urged to consider serious concerns about the conduct and atmosphere of the event itself. It was stressed that UK involvement must be looked at in the context of the arena that is being constructed by the UN for the most significant global conversation on anti-racism this decade. The event organised by Libya and aided by Iran and Cuba - some of the worst human rights abusers in the world - will now be addressed by Iranian President Ahmedinajad, a denier of the Holocaust who used his last UN General Assembly platform to espouse antisemitism.

The Foreign Secretary assured the communal representatives that as a result of their previous representations the UK had decided not to send a ministerial level representative, and had urged EU partners to act in a similar manner. He also reaffirmed the Government’s commitment to withdraw its delegation if red lines are crossed, and confirmed that any unacceptable language from the Iranian leader would meet with a firm response.

Henry Grunwald QC commented:

“Under the umbrella of JHRC-UK, our community has consistently advocated engagement with the Durban Review Process, and contributed directly to it. At the same time, we have made it clear that this stance would change if there were signals that any of the antisemitism that marred the original Durban conference would reappear. We made it clear to the Foreign Secretary on Friday that we were already perilously close to that point, and that the prospect of Ahmadinejad addressing the conference was a travesty. This is why on Friday we asked the Foreign Secretary to once again reconsider UK involvement in this process and to withdraw from it.”

ENDS

Denis Macshane MP Urges Government to Withdraw from Durban II if Jews are Attacked

Miliband Urged to Remove UK from UN Conference if Attacks on Jews Are Made

Denis MacShane MP, former No 2 in the Foreign Office, has written to Foreign Secretary, David Miliband, to urge that Britain withdraws from a UN conference opening in Geneva tomorrow if Iran’s president Ahmadinejad and other governments use the event to increase anti-semitic hate in the world.

The United States, Canada and Italy have said they will not participate in the UN conference because of fears it will repeat language attacking Jews and singling out Israel as the only nation in which discrimination takes place. At the first UN conference against racism and discrimination held in Durban in 2002, the event was turned into a festival of anti-Jewish and anti-Israeli hate.

MacShane says that FCO officials and FCO minister Mark Malloch Brown have sought to ensure the Durban 2 conference in Geneva does not repeat the anti-semitism of the initial conference but says that Britain should take note of President Obama’s decision to boycott the event.

The MP who will speak in Geneva at side meetings connected with the conference urges Miliband to be ready to pull out the UK delegation if the Iranian president or other speakers use the event to promote antisemitic ideology.

“At the first sign of hate against Jews and Israel from the podium or in any manifestations connected with the conference I hope the UK delegation will publicly withdraw and stand in solidarity with our friends in the US and Canada rather than provide cover for the Jew- and Israel-haters in the world whose record of xenophobia, discrimination and contempt for secular democracy are well-known”

MacShane writes.

MacShane’s full letter to Miliband is below - click for more:

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UK Jewish Human Rights Coalition to combat racism at Durban Review Conference in Geneva

JHRC will be fighting racism at the UN Durban Review Conference that begins on this Monday, the 20th of April, in Geneva.

The original World Conference Against Racism, in 2001 Durban, was hijacked by Anti-Israel and Anti-Zionist groups who led a well organised campaign , backed by Muslim and Arab governments, to exclude antisemitism from the conference agenda and to label Israel as an apartheid state and to revisit the “Zionism = Racism” equation. The conference itself was marked by harassment of Jewish delegates and antisemitic flyers praising Hitler. The USA and Israel walked out in disgust.

Early drafts of the Durban Review declaration contained text that downplayed antisemitism, demonised Israel and Zionism as uniquely racist, and claimed that “defamation of religion” was a form of racism. These lines have been removed from the latest version of the text, but could still be reinserted at a later stage.

Worryingly, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad has announced he will attend the Conference. At his last speech at on a UN platform, he said that

“a small but deceitful number of people called Zionists … have been dominating an important portion of the financial and monetary centres as well as the political decision-making centres of some European countries and the US in a deceitful, complex and furtive manner”

Given Ahmadinejad record of making antisemitic speeches at UN events, there is serious concern about the impact of his presence and actions.

The UK Jewish community delegation to the Durban Review Conference will be led by the co-chairs of the Jewish Human Rights Coalition (JHRC-UK), Rosalind Preston OBE and Henry Grunwald QC. The delegation will be attending to lobby governments, running a side event in the Conference venue on fighting racism, and working to ensure that the Conference is true to its principles.

JHRC-UK will be live-blogging on developments at the Durban Review Conference at its website www.jhrc.org.uk

You can also follow @JhrcUK on Twitter for real-time coverage of the Conference plenary.

Why we’re going to Geneva

A version of this piece, by Rosalind Preston OBE, appears in this week’s Jewish Chronicle

To go or not to go? That was the question.  And it still is - as discussions around the Western world on whether or not to attend the Durban Review Conference on 20 April have continued for months on end, seemingly without end.

For Jewish community leaders and commentators there has been fierce and passionate debate on the issue. But for me there was never any doubt.  How could Jewish representatives not be present at a conference where the Jewish world in general and Israel in particular is once again expected to be vilified, defamed, demonised and demeaned?

Following months of energetic and highly professional lobbying of our own government at the highest levels, including E.U. ambassadors and coupled with our unbroken attendance at U.N. preparatory conferences, a consensus began to emerge. The UK conveyed an unambiguous message that unless changes were made, its own official attendance could not be guaranteed. As a consequence we have seen the preparation of the final text radically altered, with the removal of much of the most hateful language contained in the final resolutions.

However, my fear is that in the immediately prior to and during the Conference, there will be an attempt to re-introduce language referring to Israel as an apartheid state, equating Zionism with racism and excluding Jews as victims of racism. The recent announcement by that Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad that he intends to attend the conference only ratchets up these concerns. Critics are already saying that with Iran as the vice-chair of the conference organising committee, the presence of a head of state who denies the Holocaust and openly seeks Israel’s annihilation effectively turns the UN into an enabler of genocide.

What, then, will be the reaction of our government delegation?  Hopefully, promises will be kept and members of the JHRC will be there, together with other N.G.Os involved in the fight against racism, to press for withdrawal from the conference if “red lines” have been crossed.

By being present in Geneva Jewish organisations from many parts of the world will unite in the on-going struggle against all forms of racism and most especially antisemitism.  They will be there to let the United Nations delegations know that the Jewish world has not forgotten the outrageous events of 2001 Durban when the N.G.O. Forum descended into anti-Jewish, anti-Zionist and anti-Israel outpourings.

I hope that the 2009 Review Conference will address the suffering of millions of people around the globe, victims of many forms of racism, and enable us to return home, having contributed to that debate, as well as fighting the long and bitter battle against antisemitism.

JHRC-UK supports Geneva Holocaust Commemoration which Coincides with Durban Review Conference

To mark Holocaust Remembrance Day, the Jewish Communities of Geneva have organised a public commemorative ceremony for victims of the Holocaust.

The Jewish Human Rights Coalition (UK) is supporting and attending the event, and has also invited several UK NGOs that are attending the Durban Review Conference.

The ceremony will take place on the Place des Nations, at 18:30 on Monday the 20th of April; the same day and location as the opening of the Durban Review Conference.

The event will bring together survivors of the Holocaust from accross the religious spectrum, and will include official political and religious representation. Tribute will be paid to René Cassin and Raphael Lemkin, two key figures who drafted fundamental human rights texts: the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Convention for the Prevention and Punishment of Genocide.

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