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For all the noise its supporters make, BDS has been a failure

The call for an academic boycott began 20 years ago this week, but its advocates still operate on the margins of society

April 4, 2022 08:18
GettyImages-92747153
Demonstrators hold a placard urging the international community to take action against Israel's settlement policy in the occupied territories as left-wing Israeli and foreign peace activists join Palestinians in a protest in the Arab east Jerusalem neighborhood of Sheikh Jarrah on November 04, 2009. According to Israeli radio, about 200 people protestested in Sheikh Jarrah against what they call the "Judaisation" of Arab east Jerusalem and the ongoing construction of Jewish settlements in the Jerusalem area. BDS is a campaign calling for "boycott, deinvestment and sanctions" against Israel. AFP PHOTO/GALI TIBBON (Photo credit should read GALI TIBBON/AFP via Getty Images)
5 min read

The mission statement for the United Nations World Conference against Racism, which took place in Durban, South Africa from 31 August to 7 September 2001, stated that the conference was “a unique and important opportunity to create a new world vision for the fight against racism and racial discrimination in the new millennium.”  

The Jewish delegates who attended expected that a rise in antisemitism and racism in the 1990s, especially in Europe, would be high on the agenda. 

How wrong they were. The language used was so viciously anti-Israel in both the conference and the resolutions that the United States and Israel both withdrew their delegations on the fourth day of the conference. 

The worst, however, was still to come, because as well as the main plenary there was also an NGO (non-governmental organisation) forum and a student summit.