Attacks on cultural heritage in Iraq, Syria and Yemen set the tone for the 39th session of Unesco’s World Heritage Committee, which closed in Bonn, Germany, on 8 July.
The meeting opened with the launch of the Unite for Heritage Coalition, an international initiative calling for greater co-operation between governments to counter the deliberate destruction of heritage that has become an all too familiar sight in recent months.
News emerged during the ten-day meeting that richly carved funerary busts and a three-metre high statue of a lion were destroyed in Palmyra; Isil gained control of the ancient Syrian city in May. “The threat is global and our response must be global,” said Unesco’s director-general Irina Bokova. “It requires better co-ordination among national services, the exchange of information among states. Nothing can replace, in this area, the action of governments.” Bokova stressed the need for “police, customs officials, museums, governments, actors from the cultural, humanitarian and security sectors, civil society and the media” to work together “to create new alliances to meet the challenges of violent extremism”.
The committee also adopted the Bonn Declaration, which, among other things, “condemns the barbaric assaults, violence and crimes committed in recent times by [Isil], against the cultural heritage of Iraq, including the World Heritage Site at Hatra, which recalls mindless destructions in Bamiyan, Timbuktu and elsewhere” and denounces “the destruction and looting of cultural objects used as a tactic of war and as a source to fund terrorism”.
The ancient city of Hatra in Iraq is one of three sites recently added to Unesco’s growing “Danger List”. Its inscription comes three months after videos of Isil militants attacking the 2,000-year-old World Heritage Site with rifles and sledgehammers emerged on the internet. Two sites in Yemen, the Old City of Sana’a and the Old Walled City of Shibam, were also added to the “Danger List”, which now includes 48 properties from the Bamiyan Valley in Afghanistan to the earthen architecture of the port city of Coro in Venezuela.
Unesco also announced it has joined forces with its sister agency Unitar (United Nations Institute for Training and Research) to use satellite imagery and other geo-spatial technologies to monitor heritage sites in conflict zones and after natural disasters.
World Heritage List grows
The ancient Roman port city of Ephesus in Turkey, 10,000-year-old rock art from Saudi Arabia and five 18th-century Franciscan missions in San Antonio, Texas (the most famous being The Alamo where the US frontiersman Davy Crockett died during the Texas Revolution of 1836) are among the 24 sites added to Unesco’s World Heritage List, which now boasts 1,031 properties from 163 countries. Of the 24 latest additions, 11 sites are in Europe and North America, eight are in Asia and the Pacific, three are in Latin America and the Caribbean and two are in the Arab States. Around 48% of the entire World heritage List is made up of sites from Europe and North America. The Arab States have the fewest, with around 8%.
The next session of the World Heritage Committee is due to be held in Istanbul in July 2016.