Emirates Red Crescent completes housing project in Syria

Launch ceremony of the ERC's 47-prefabricated unit housing project in Latakia, Syria. (WAM)
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Updated 20 August 2023
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Emirates Red Crescent completes housing project in Syria

  • Units built feature two bedrooms, a living room, a kitchen and a bathroom

LATAKIA: The Emirates Red Crescent has completed a 47-prefabricated unit housing project in the Latakia Governorate in Syria, Emirates News Agency reported on Sunday. 

Under the directives of UAE President Sheikh Mohammed bin Zayed Al-Nahyan, the ERC is constructing 1,000 housing units across the governorate worth AED 65 million ($17.7 million). 

The units that have been built feature two bedrooms, a living room, a kitchen and a bathroom and utilize solar power to generate electricity.

ERC Secretary-General Hamoud Al-Junaibi said that a committee comprising officials from the local development authority, the Latakia Governorate Council, the Syrian Arab Red Crescent, and other relevant authorities was formed to choose families eligible for the housing units.

Amer Hilal, governor of Latakia, thanked the UAE for implementing humanitarian and relief projects in Syria, noting that they had a significant impact on alleviating the suffering of quake victims and assisting them to resume their lives.

Hilal said that Latakia has prepared seven sites for the housing projects and provided them with basic infrastructure including sewerage, electricity and phone networks and services centers. 
 


UNESCO fears for fate of historical sites during Iran war

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UNESCO fears for fate of historical sites during Iran war

  • “UNESCO is deeply concerned by the first impact that the hostilities are already having on many world heritage sites,” Assomo said
  • Tehran’s Golestan palace, damaged in US–Israeli strikes, is testimony to the grandeur of Iran’s civilization in the 19th century

PARIS: UNESCO said it is deeply concerned about the fate of world heritage sites in Iran and across the region, after Tehran’s Golestan palace, often compared to Versailles, and a historic mosque and palace in Isfahan were damaged in the war.
The United Nations’ cultural agency on Wednesday urged all parties to protect the region’s outstanding cultural sites, saying four of Iran’s 29 world heritage sites had been damaged since the start of the US and Israeli war with Iran.
“UNESCO is deeply concerned by the first impact that the hostilities are already having on many world heritage sites,” Lazare Eloundou Assomo, director of the World ⁠Heritage Center, told Reuters, ⁠adding he was also concerned for sites in Israel, Lebanon and across the Middle East.
Tehran’s Golestan palace, damaged in US–Israeli strikes, is testimony to the grandeur of Iran’s civilization in the 19th century, he said.
The palace was chosen as the Persian royal residence and seat of power by the Qajar family and shows the introduction ⁠of European styles in Persian arts, according to the UNESCO website. The last Shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, held a coronation ceremony there in 1969.
“We sometimes even compare it with the Versailles Palace in France, for instance, and it has suffered, unfortunately, some damage. We don’t know the extent for the moment. But clearly, with the images that we have been able to receive, we can confirm ... it has been affected,” Eloundou Assomo said.
Photos of the interior of the palace have shown piles of smashed glass and shards of ⁠wood on ⁠the floor, and shattered woodwork.
Isfahan was one of Central Asia’s most important cities and a key point on the Silk Road trading route. Its Masjed-e Jame (Jameh Mosque) is more than 1,000 years old and shows the development of Islamic art through 12 centuries.
Buildings close to the buffer zone of the prehistoric sites of the Khorramabad Valley have also been damaged, UNESCO said.
UNESCO has shared coordinates of key cultural sites to all parties, Eloundou Assomo said, and was monitoring damage.
“We are calling for the protection of all sites of cultural significance ... everything that tells the history of all the civilizations of the 18 countries in the region,” he said.