The rise of far-right politics across the world may hit already scant foreign aid, increase tensions between communities and countries, and lead to more people fleeing conflict, Nobel laureates, leaders and experts warned.
Populist parties and nationalist politicians across Europe and the United States are gaining popularity amid a migrant crisis and sluggish global economic growth.
Experts say this is not only fuelling xenophobia and hate crimes against minorities, it could lead to more violence and more migrants and refugees seeking shelter in the West.
“I am certainly very concerned. I think the anti-immigrant feeling is going to grow. It’s pretty potent politics and it’s very dangerous,” Jeffrey Sachs, director of the Centre for Sustainable Development at Columbia University, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
The economist was speaking earlier this month on the sidelines of a child rights conference in India attended by a host of international figures.
After a referendum campaign dominated by the anti-immigration, eurosceptic views of politician Nigel Farage’s UK Independence Party, Britain voted in June to leave the European Union.
The result has bolstered other far-right populist politicians such National Front leader Marine Le Pen who is expected to perform strongly in next year’s French presidential election on a eurosceptic platform.
Alarming liberals the most was last month’s election of Donald Trump as the next US president. The billionaire businessman has previously called for a ban on Muslims, a wall to be built along the US-Mexico border and increased militarization.
Jose Ramos-Horta, Nobel peace laureate and former president of East Timor, said the surge in populism was based on xenophobic lies fed by politicians and far-right media groups.


