GENEVA -- U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon urged the world Monday to rally against the threat that intolerance could rise as a result of the economic crisis, saying "the time is now" to stamp out racism.
Mr. Ban, opening the global body's first racism conference in eight years, said racism including anti-Semitism and Islamophobia needed to be tackled.
"I fear that today's economic crisis, if not handled properly, could evolve into a full-scale political crisis marked by social unrest, weakened governments and angry publics who have lost faith in their leaders and their own future," the U.N. chief said.
"In such circumstances, the consequences for communities already victimized by prejudice or exclusion could be frightening."
Mr. Ban also said he regretted the absence of the U.S. and eight other Western nations that have pulled out because of fears Muslim countries will dominate the conference with calls to denounce Israel and for a global ban on criticizing Islam.
"There comes a time to reaffirm our faith in fundamental human rights and the dignity and worth of us all," Mr. Ban told the gathering of thousands of ministers, diplomats and dignitaries at the U.N.'s European headquarters in Geneva.
The administration of President Barack Obama announced Saturday it would boycott the weeklong meeting because it makes reference to a declaration made in 2001 at the global body's first racism conference in Durban, South Africa.
That document was agreed upon after the U.S. and Israel walked out over attempts to liken Zionism -- the movement to establish a Jewish state in the Holy Land -- to racism.
Organizers have sought to steer clear of the controversies that marred the Durban meeting, but have run into many of the same contentious issues. Australia, Canada, Germany, Israel, Italy, Netherlands, New Zealand and Poland also aren't participating, while Iran's hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad is scheduled to take the floor later Monday.
The major sticking points in the draft final declaration prepared for the current meeting concern its implied criticism of Israel and an attempt by Muslim governments to ban all criticism of Islam, Sharia law, the prophet Muhammad and other tenets of their faith.
Mr. Obama, speaking in Trinidad on Sunday after attending the Summit of the Americas, said: "I would love to be involved in a useful conference that addressed continuing issues of racism and discrimination around the globe." But he said the language of the U.N.'s draft declaration risked a reprise of Durban, during which "folks expressed antagonism toward Israel in ways that were often times completely hypocritical and counterproductive."
"We expressed in the run-up to this conference our concerns that if you adopted all of the language from 2001, that's not something we can sign up for," Mr. Obama said.
Mr. Ban said no society -- rich or poor, large or small -- is immune to the dangers of racism, which he called a "denial of human rights, pure and simple." Addressing intolerance in its various forms, Mr. Ban said racism "may be institutionalized, as the Holocaust will always remind us," but that it may manifest itself in more subtle forms through the "hatred of a particular people or a class -- as anti-Semitism, for example, or the newer Islamophobia."
Many Muslim nations want curbs to free speech to prevent insults to Islam they claim have proliferated since the terrorist attacks in the U.S. on Sept. 11, 2001.
They cite the 2005 cartoons of Muhammad published by a Danish newspaper that sparked riots in the Muslim world, and allegations that authorities in the West have targeted innocent Muslims through antiterror and other police action.
Those demands had been largely resisted by the U.S. and other Western nations, some of whom are participating in the conference.
Mr. Ban steered clear of the issue of a global ban on religious defamation, as demanded by Muslim nations, but urged action against a "new politics of xenophobia" that is on the rise and could become dramatically worse as a result of new technologies that proliferate hatred.
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