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Monday, June 23, 2014

UNESCO grants Battir endangered heritage status

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(MaanImages/file)
DOHA (AFP) -- UN cultural agency UNESCO on Friday granted endangered World Heritage status to ancient terraces in the West Bank that are under threat from the Israeli separation barrier.

After an emergency nomination by Palestinian officials, UNESCO's annual World Heritage Committee gathering in Doha voted to grant the protected status to the agricultural community of Battir, which straddles the Green Line just south of Jerusalem and where Israel plans to erect part of its separation wall.

The granting of the status is likely to boost the efforts of local residents locked in a high-profile court battle to change the route of the barrier.

"The site is inscribed, congratulations to Palestine," committee chairwoman Sheikha Al-Mayassa bint Hamad bin Khalifa Al-Thani said after the resolution was narrowly approved, against the recommendations of UNESCO experts.

The Palestinian delegation rejoiced at the vote, hugging and cheering.

Battir is famous for its ancient terraces and Roman-era irrigation system which is still used by 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.
 
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Palestinian farmers in Battir, a West Bank village near Bethlehem, use a Roman-era irrigation system to water their crops. New York Times 2012
  
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RAMALLAH: The United Nations cultural agency has listed the Palestinian village of Battir as a World Heritage site in danger, raising hopes among residents on Saturday that this will protect their community against Israel’s West Bank separation barrier.

Battir, located just south of occupied Jerusalem in the West Bank, is known for its ancient farming terraces and an irrigation system from Roman times. In listing Battir on Friday, Unesco said the village faces “irreversible damage,” citing “the start of construction of a separation wall that may isolate farmers from fields they have cultivated for centuries.”

Israel began building a separation barrier in the West Bank more than a decade ago, saying it’s meant to keep out Palestinian fighters.

The Palestinians say the barrier has turned out to be a land grab because it slices off almost 10 per cent of the West Bank.

The route of the barrier in the Battir area is before Israel’s Supreme Court.

The lawyer representing village residents, Ghiath Nasser, said Saturday he hopes that the Unesco recognition will help sway the judges to rule in favor of them.

Friends of the Earth Middle East, an Israeli-Palestinian-Jordanian group that joined the high court appeal against the barrier, said Israel needs to find another solution in this part of the West Bank. The Israeli military “failed to strike the needed balance between the interest of security and cultural heritage preservation,” said Gidon Bromberg, a member of the group.

Arbil Citadel

Meanwhile, the Arbil Citadel that dominates the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan was granted World Heritage Site status on Saturday in a move praised as a rare “note of optimism” amid the country’s violence.

Delegates at Unesco’s World Heritage Committee voted to grant the coveted status at a gathering in Doha, where they are considering some 40 cultural and natural wonders for inclusion on the UN list.

A member of the Iraqi delegation praised the inclusion as “a gift you have made to my people and all the communities of Iraq... who are in such need of a note of optimism right now.”

The Arbil Citadel is a formerly fortified occupied mound in the centre of Erbil that is among the oldest continuously inhabited sites in the world, dating back at least 6,000 years.
 

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