Concern over Syria as World Heritage committee meets

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PHNOM PENH: Six ancient Syrian sites as well as Australia’s Great Barrier Reef could be listed as endangered by Unesco, which Sunday begins its annual session to decide which global cultural and natural treasures merit World Heritage status.

The main task of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation committee will be to decide whether some 31 sites, including Japan’s Mount Fuji and the city of Agadez in Niger, are of ‘outstanding universal value’.

Around 1,300 delegates are due to attend the ten-day conference in Cambodia, which is officially opened in the capital Phnom Penh yesterday with a speech by Cambodian premier Hun Sen.

The closing ceremony is to be held in the country’s own heritage site, the temple complex of Angkor in Siem Reap.

Discussion of new names to add to the already 962-strong World Heritage list is due to begin on Thursday.

“About 15 sites are looking likely to be inscribed now, but you know the committee is independent … so the figure is an estimate,” said Unesco spokesman Roni Amelan at a press conference in Phnom Penh yesterday.

He said the number of nominations had been reduced after Vietnam opted to withdraw its bid to list Cat Tien national park after the application was found not to have met World Heritage criteria in an initial evaluation.

The meeting will also highlight existing sites under threat.

Syria’s civil war, which has claimed some 93,000 lives and reduced huge areas to rubble, has posed a grave threat to its World Heritage sites, according to an assessment by Unesco.

The ancient cities of Aleppo, Damascus and Bosra are among the sites that have been damaged during the fighting and the assessment said ‘Aleppo in particular has suffered considerable damage’. — AFP