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A picture taken on June 17, 2012 shows Palestinian children swimming in the ancient spring in the West Bank village of Battir, located between Jerusalem and Bethlehem (AFP Photo/Menahem Kahana) |
A picture shows a Palestinian farmer irrigating her land in the West Bank village of Battir, located between Jerusalem and Bethlehem, on June 17, 2012 (AFP Photo/Menahem Kahana) |
Jerusalem (AFP) - Palestinian
officials have filed an urgent request with UNESCO to receive World
Heritage status for a West Bank village whose ancient terraces are under
threat from the Israeli separation barrier.
The
request to put the agricultural community of Battir on the UN cultural
agency's list of protected sites was filed earlier this month, a village
official said on Sunday.
"They will send a delegation to check the area," he told AFP, without saying when the visit would take place.
Battir was added to UNESCO's tentative list in 2012, and the UN body will vote on the application to upgrade its status in June.
Battir,
which straddles the Green Line just south of Jerusalem, is famous for
its ancient terraces and Roman-era irrigation system which is still used
by the villagers for their crops.
But
the village has come under threat from Israeli plans to erect part of
the West Bank separation barrier there, which experts say will
irretrievably damage the water system.
The
Palestinians won membership in UNESCO in October 2011 and quickly moved
to submit a number of sites for recognition, including an emergency
application for Bethlehem's Church of the Nativity which was approved in
June the following year, despite Israeli objections.
Battir
residents are currently locked in a high-profile court battle to change
the route of the barrier, which is being led by Friends of the Earth
Middle East (FoEME) and supported by Israel's Nature and Parks
Authority.
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