UNESCO chief in Iraq to visit war-battered cultural sites

UNESCO chief Audrey Azoulay tours the national museum in Baghdad during a three-day visit to Iraq. (AFP)
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Updated 06 March 2023
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UNESCO chief in Iraq to visit war-battered cultural sites

  • Years of war and insurgency have taken a heavy toll on Iraq’s many treasures including six UNESCO World Heritage sites

BAGHDAD: The head of the UN cultural agency on Monday started a three-day visit to Iraq where many priceless cultural treasures have been damaged or destroyed during decades of conflict.

UNESCO chief Audrey Azoulay will visit reconstruction projects and meet top officials.

Years of war and insurgency have taken a heavy toll on Iraq’s many treasures including six UNESCO World Heritage sites.

“This visit is dedicated to reconstruction in Iraq,” said a spokesman for the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization which funds several projects in Iraq.

Iraq’s antiquities have been extensively looted, often by organized crime groups, since the 2003 US-led invasion that toppled Saddam Hussein.

The national museum in Baghdad, which displayed many ancient relics, was not spared during the invasion when many treasures were stolen.

More damage was done during the brutal rise of Daesh a decade later and the battle to dislodge it which devastated large areas in the northern city of Mosul.

UNESCO will examine how to help Iraq maintain its ancient heritage and put the spotlight back on its culture, the agency’s spokesman said.

UNESCO has also declared natural heritage sites in Iraq, including the southern marshlands fed by the Euphrates and the Tigris rivers.

The vast wetlands have also been put at severe risk, including by draining under Saddam’s regime and by climate change and upstream dam construction.

Azoulay will on Tuesday visit Mosul where UNESCO funds major reconstruction projects.

On Wednesday she will head to Irbil, capital of the autonomous region of Kurdistan and home to an ancient citadel that is also a UNESCO World Heritage Site.


Israel closes crossings into Gaza Strip, including for humanitarian aid workers, Israeli government agency says

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Israel closes crossings into Gaza Strip, including for humanitarian aid workers, Israeli government agency says

  • The closures included the Rafah crossing
  • In mid-February, the UN said it continues to face impediments in attempts to deliver lifesaving aid to Gaza

JERUSALEM: Crossings into the Gaza Strip, vital for the delivery of humanitarian aid and the movement of patients in need of medical evacuation, were closed on Saturday as Israeli and US forces attacked Iran, the Israeli government agency COGAT said.
The closures included the Rafah crossing, located at the Palestinian territory’s southern border with Egypt, which ⁠was only reopened at ⁠the beginning of February to allow a trickle of Palestinians to cross for the first time in months, including patients in need of urgent medical care.
Virtually all of Gaza’s population of ⁠over 2 million was displaced during Israel’s devastating offensive on Gaza, and the strip remains dependent on humanitarian aid.
In mid-February, the United Nations said it continues to face impediments in attempts to deliver lifesaving aid to Gaza.
Human Rights Watch stated in a February report that Israeli restrictions on aid had continued to cause shortages ⁠of medicines, ⁠reconstruction equipment, food, and water inside the strip.
COGAT said in its statement on the closures of the Gaza crossings that enough food had been delivered to Gaza since the beginning of the ceasefire to provide four times the need of the population, without providing evidence. It said “the existing stock is expected to suffice for an extended period.”