UNESCO puts Hebron on endangered heritage list, outraging Israel
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UNESCO puts Hebron on endangered heritage list, outraging Israel
A picture taken on July 7, 2017 shows religious Jews and tourists walking towards the Cave of the Patriarchs, also known as the Ibrahimi Mosque, which is a holy shrine for Jews and Muslims, from the Israeli side in the heart of the divided city of Hebron in the southern West Bank. On July 7, 2017 UNESCO declared in a secret ballot the Old City of Hebron in the occupied West Bank a protected heritage site. Hebron is home to more than 200,000 Palestinians, and a few hundred Israeli settlers who live in a heavily fortified enclave near the site known to Muslims as the Ibrahimi Mosque and to Jews as the Cave of the Patriarchs. HAZEM BADER / AFP.

by Anna Maria Jakubek



WARSAW.- UNESCO on Friday declared the Old City of Hebron a Palestinian world heritage site in danger, sparking outrage from Israel which said the decision denied a Jewish claim to an ancient burial cave that is also sacred to Muslims.

The Tomb of the Patriarchs, known to Muslims as the Ibrahami Mosque, is venerated by members of both faiths as the gravesite of the biblical patriarch Abraham, his son Isaac and grandson Jacob.

The UN's cultural arm voted 12 to three -- with six abstentions -- to grant heritage status to the core of the ancient city in the occupied West Bank, which is home to more than 200,000 Palestinians and a few hundred Jewish settlers who live under heavy Israeli military protection.

"Just inscribed on @UNESCO #WorldHeritage List & World Heritage in Danger List: Hebron/Al-Khalil Old Town," the organisation said on its official Twitter feed.

The vote drew a sharp denunciation from Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, who described it as "another delusional decision by UNESCO," while the United States announced it would review its ties with the agency.

"This time they ruled the Tomb of the Patriarchs in Hebron is a Palestinian site, meaning not a Jewish site, and that it is in danger," Netanyahu said incredulously, speaking in Hebrew in a video posted online.

US Ambassador to the UN Nikki Haley meanwhile termed the decision an "affront to history."

The US stopped funding UNESCO in 2011 after it admitted the Palestinians as a member-state, but it remains a member of the body's 58-member executive board.

Brought by the Palestinians, the resolution declared Hebron's Old City to be an area of outstanding universal value.

The resolution was fast-tracked on the basis that the site was under threat, with the Palestinians accusing Israel of an "alarming" number of violations, including vandalism and damage to property.

The Palestinian foreign ministry hailed Friday's decision a "success" for its diplomatic efforts that came "despite a frantic Israeli campaign spreading lies and distorting the facts about the Palestinian rights."

Symbol of the conflict
Israel has long accused the United Nations of inherent bias against it and there have been a number of disputes at the organisation, where Palestinian president Mahmud Abbas has sought to take the battle for statehood.

In May, UNESCO passed a resolution condemning Israel's role as the "occupying power" in annexed east Jerusalem in another decision slammed by Israel which sees the entire city as its unified capital.

Hebron claims to be one of the oldest cities in the world, with its origins dating back to the Chalcolithic period -- more than 3,000 years BC.

At various times it has been conquered by Romans, Jews, Crusaders and Mamluks.
It is also a stark symbol of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

The few hundred Israelis live closed off in several small, interconnected settlements that most of the world consider as illegal, with Palestinians largely banned from entering and using nearby streets.

Israel seized the West Bank in the 1967 war in a move considered illegal by the United Nations.

'Shameful and offensive'
The UNESCO committee usually votes via a show of hands but this time, Croatia, Jamaica and Poland requested the secret ballot, prompting a heated discussion which required the chairman to call in security.

There was another moment of intrigue when Israel's ambassador to UNESCO, Carmel Shama Hacohen, took the floor after the vote but kept being interrupted by his cell phone.

"Mr Chairman, it's my plumber in my apartment in Paris. There is a huge problem in my toilet," he eventually said.

"And it's much (more) important than the decision that you just adopted," he said.

Israel's UN ambassador Danny Danon also weighed in on the vote, describing it as "shameful & offensive."

"This is an ugly display of discrimination & an act of aggression against the Jewish people. No @UN agency can disassociate our people from the burial grounds of our patriarchs & matriarchs."

By listing sites on its World Heritage in Danger list, UNESCO seeks to mobilise the international community to protect them. It also allows for the allocation of immediate World Heritage Fund assistance to the property.

Earlier this week, the committee added the historic centre of Vienna to its list of endangered sites but chose to keep Australia's Great Barrier Reef off, despite concern over coral bleaching.


© Agence France-Presse










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