Palestine drops bid to register new UNESCO heritage site

Palestine is backing down from plans to ask UNESCO to place an ancient West Bank village on its World Heritage in Danger list, a year after the UN scientific and cultural agency voted to include Bethlehem’s Nativity Church. 

Residents of Battir, southwest of Jerusalem, which is home to an ancient Roman irrigation network in continuous use for centuries, expected the Palestinian delegation to nominate the farming village for inclusion on UNESCO’s rosters during its annual convention, which opens Sunday in Cambodia.

Experts in Battir and Bethlehem who helped draft the application told Ma’an that the Palestinian delegation in Paris received a completed file in January. It should have submitted it by a February deadline but did not.

‘Missing a great chance’

The decision to put off the nomination angered Palestinian experts and local officials who had selected Battir based on imminent threats they said its cultural sites faced from”Israel”.

The Battir municipality is locked in a court battle with the Israeli occupation army to re-route the barrier, and they hoped the global attention from a successful vote might even the playing field.

“Palestine is missing a great chance by not submitting the file,” according to Battir mayor Akram Bader. “We are in court against the wall.”

Bader said the Palestinian leadership neglected an opportunity to offer “protection against Israeli violations” as well as boost the economic, cultural and historical value of the village.

UNESCO’s 21-member World Heritage committee meets once a year to discuss the management of existing heritage sites and to consider nominations for new ones. It was at this conference in June 2012 that the agency narrowly voted to accept Palestine’s first submission, the Nativity Church, over the objections of Israel and the United States. Palestinian officials said they would submit Battir in 2013.

The village sits upon the slopes of two rocky, green hills where its farmers still use a 2,000-year-old Roman irrigation system that runs down the sides of both hills.

Giovanni Fontana Antonelli, a cultural programs specialist for UNESCO, called the Palestinian Authority’s decision “very inexplicable” and charged that it could “jeopardize the site forever.”

Antonelli, who helped prepare the application in December and January, said that UNESCO’s recognition would have made it “more difficult for Israel to grab that land.”

He also said it would have become a natural tourism destination. “People in Battir (could) start to have small businesses there instead of migrating,” he said.

Nada Atrash, head of research and development at the Cultural Heritage Preservation Center in Bethlehem, agreed that the nomination “would help Palestine but at the same time add to its responsibilities.”

Atrash, who was also involved in preparing the application, says the nomination “will not stop vandalism” because UNESCO can only issue statements and condemnations.

She said it was up to the Palestinian people to protect their land, but she hoped the Palestinian leadership would reconsider the application.

B.N 

You might also like
Latest news
Israeli aggression targets civilian sites south of Damascus Russian Trade Representation in Syria holds a sports marathon to celebrate National Unity Day in Rus... Settlers burn Palestinian lands and homes east of Ramallah Lebanese resistance targets Meron base, settlements and gatherings of the Israeli enemy 43,374 martyrs since the beginning of the Israeli war of extermination on the Gaza Strip Three martyrs in Israeli air raids on southern Lebanon Syrian film (Salma) at Cairo International Film Festival Recreational activities and psychological support in Homs for children arriving from Lebanon Pezeshkian: Iran is facing an economic war to weaken it Palestinian Foreign Ministry: The occupation crimes in the West Bank are part of the war of extermin... The Syria Trust for Development in cooperation with the Finnish Relief Organization: In the Aleppo c... A Palestinian man was shot by the occupation forces near Bethlehem Syrian Postal Corporation issues a commemorative stamp on the occasion of “National Environment Day” The beginning of the winter vegetable season  in Sweida with a plan of 2890 dunums Palestinian Presidency: The world must take concrete steps on the ground against Israel With the participation of 20 Artisans, the Autumn 2024 Exhibition kicks off at Baniyas Culture Cente... Minister of Endowments discusses with Vice President of the Russian Pyatigorsk State University the ... Martyrs and wounded as a result of the occupation's bombing of Al-Nuseirat camp Lebanese National  resistance targets 4 settlements and an Israeli air base Occupation Forces Detain 10 Palestinians in the West Bank