Jamaica seeks world heritage status for reggae

Jamaican Reggae musician Chronixx performs at the Bill Graham Civic Auditorium, in San Francisco, California. (AFP)
Updated 21 November 2018
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Jamaica seeks world heritage status for reggae

PARIS: Jamaica is bidding to have reggae music admitted to a list of global cultural treasures worthy of protection, the UN’s cultural agency UNESCO announced on Tuesday.
Paris-based UNESCO keeps a list of so-called “intangible heritage” found around the globe, which groups together traditional cultural practices such as horse games in central Asia to pizza-making in Naples.
Jamaica has asked for reggae to be added this year at a meeting of the UN agency on the island of Mauritius, where 40 proposals are set to be considered from November 26 to December 1.
So far, 399 examples of world heritage including dances, food-making practices, boat-building, games, festivals and even coaxing rituals for camels in Mongolia have been added.
A successful application is largely symbolic, but can serve to raise the profile of the country and the practice.
Other applications this year have been filed for the Irish game of hurling, the making of perfume in the French town of Grasse, and traditional wrestling in South Korea known as Ssireum.
Reggae emerged in the late 1960s in Jamaica and quickly become a global phenomenon thanks to singers such as Bob Marley and Jimmy Cliff and the famed producer Lee “Scratch” Perry.
The music, with its heavy bass lines and drums, has influenced countless artists since and spawned new sounds such as dub.


Queen Rania shares new family picture

Updated 13 December 2025
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Queen Rania shares new family picture

DUBAI: Queen Rania of Jordan on Saturday shared a new family picture, offering a rare glimpse of the royal family together.

The photograph shows the queen with King Abdullah II, their children Crown Prince Hussein, Princess Iman, Princess Salma and Prince Hashem, as well as Princess Rajwa, the crown prince’s wife, and Jameel Alexander Thermiotis, Princess Iman’s husband, alongside the king and queen’s grandchildren, Princess Iman bint Hussein and Amina bint Jameel.

The family is pictured walking together outdoors, dressed in coordinated soft green and blue tones.

Queen Rania captioned the post: “May the bonds of family and love continue to grow in the year ahead.”