The UN's human rights chief has
launched a scathing attack on Western populist politicians, branding
them "demagogues and political fantasists".
Zeid Ra'ad al-Hussein singled out Dutch far-right leader Geert Wilders, saying he used bigotry as a political weapon.
He
said he and others, including US Republican Donald Trump and Brexit
campaigner Nigel Farage, used the same tactics as so-called Islamic
State.
Mr Hussein was addressing a security conference in The Hague.
In
an election manifesto published last month, Mr Wilders said that if
elected he would close all mosques and ban the Koran and Muslim
immigrants.
His Freedom Party (PVV) is leading opinion polls in the Netherlands before the 2017 election.
Mr
Wilders also addressed the US Republican Party National Convention in
Cleveland, Ohio, last month. Mr Trump's campaign has been marked by
hardline rhetoric on immigration and social issues.
Mr Hussein, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, told the inauguration of the of the Peace, Justice and Security Foundation, that
he wanted to address his statement to "Geert Wilders, his acolytes,
indeed to all those like him - the populists, demagogues and political
fantasists".
"I am a Muslim, who is, confusingly to racists,
also white-skinned; whose mother is European and father, Arab. And I am
angry, too, because of Mr Wilders' lies and half-truths, manipulations
and peddling of fear," Mr Hussein said.
He described the PVV manifesto as "grotesque" and said Mr Wilders had
much in common with presidential hopeful Donald Trump, Hungary's Prime
Minister Viktor Orban, France's National Front leader Marine Le Pen, and
former UKIP party leader Nigel Farage.
He said all had similarities to the ideology espoused by the Islamic State (IS) group.
"All
seek in varying degrees to recover a past, halcyon and so pure in form,
where sunlit fields are settled by peoples united by ethnicity or
religion. A past that most certainly, in reality, did not exist
anywhere, ever."
He added: "Make no mistake, I certainly do not
equate the actions of nationalist demagogues with those of Daesh (IS).
But in its mode of communication, its use of half-truths and
oversimplification, the propaganda of Daesh uses tactics similar to
those of the populists."
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