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France criticises USA for shunning UN racism talks

April 22, 2009 00:00:00


PARIS, April 21 (Reuters): France's Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner criticised the United States Tuesday for boycotting a United Nations conference where Iran's president launched a verbal attack on Israel.
France, which has strong diplomatic and business ties with the Middle East, had joined a walk-out of delegates in Geneva after President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad called Israel cruel and racist in a speech Monday, but then returned to the meeting.
Kouchner said it was wrong of the United States to shun the conference after announcing it was open for negotiations on Iran's nuclear programme.
"It's paradoxical-they don't want to listen to Iran in Geneva but they are ready to talk to them," Kouchner told French radio Europe 1. "More than a paradox, that could really be a mistake."
France's President Nicolas Sarkozy has worked hard to mend ties with the United States after a rift over the war in Iraq, and was eager to show off his good relations with US President Barack Obama at this month's NATO summit in Strasbourg.
But France has also been keen to maintain close relations with Arab governments, who have supported the conference.
Kouchner said France would continue to work on the draft text prepared for the Geneva meeting and expected a result later Tuesday, adding that the declaration would condemn anti-Semitism and the Holocaust.
"It will be a defeat for Ahmadinejad because there will be, I hope by tonight, this declaration. But the politics of the empty chair is easy. You leave and you shout at the others," Kouchner said.
The United States, Canada, Australia and a number of European governments stayed away from the conference on fears it would be hijacked by critics of Israel.
Ahmadinejad has in the past cast doubt on the Nazi Holocaust, and in his speech Monday accused Israel of establishing a "cruel and racist regime."
"Following World War Two they resorted to military aggressions to make an entire nation homeless under the pretext of Jewish suffering," Ahmadinejad told the conference, on the day that Jewish communities commemorate the Holocaust.
Earlier report says: The United Nations sought Tuesday to rally nations against intolerance a day after the anti-Israel speech by Iran's president sparked protests and swelled the US-led list of countries boycotting the world racism conference.
Dozens of Western diplomats walked out during Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's speech and a pair of rainbow-wigged protesters threw clown noses at Iran's hardline leader Monday when he called Israel the "most cruel and repressive racist regime."
"In the drama of yesterday (Monday) everyone forgot what the conference is actually about," UN spokesman Rupert Colville said. "I think we're back on track now."
Conference organisers have sought desperately to avoid the same problems that marred the last global racism gathering eight years ago in Durban, South Africa. The US and Israel walked out midway into that event over an attempt by Muslim countries to liken Zionism - the movement to establish a Jewish state in the Holy Land - to racism.

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