The Asian Age

Unesco puts 5 Libya sites on heritage- in- danger list

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Istanbul, July 14: The UN’s cultural agency on Thursday added Libya’s five World Heritage sites to its danger list, saying armed militias posed a grave danger to the archaeolog­ical treasures.

The sites named by Unesco include the Old City of Ghadames, often referred to as “the pearl of the desert” and the archaeolog­ical site of Cyrene, one of the principal cities in the Hellenic world.

The rock- art sites of Tadrart Acacus on the border with Algeria that feature thousands of cave paintings dating back as far back as 12,000 BC to 100 AD are also listed.

The other two are the coastal archaeolog­ical sites of Leptis Magna and Sabratha, a Mediterran­ean trading post that was once part of the brief Numidian Kingdom of Massinissa before it was taken over the by Romans. “The committee noted the high level of instabilit­y affecting the country and the fact that armed groups are present on these sites or in their immediate surroundin­gs,” Unesco said at the 40th meeting of its World Heritage Committee in Istanbul.

“It invoked the damage already incurred and the serious threat of further damage to explain the decision,” it said in a statement.

Since the 2011 NATOled military interventi­on, Libya has been in the grip of a conflict which has killed thousands as rival militias fight for territory and control of the country.

The three archaeolog­ical sites of Cyrene, Leptis Magna and Sabratha were added to Unesco’s World Heritage List of the world’s outstandin­g natural and cultural wonders in 1982, following Ghadames in 1986 and Tadrart Acacus in 1985.

Unesco says its list of heritage- in- danger is designed to inform the world of risks to the very characteri­stics that led to a site being listed as World Heritage and encouragin­g corrective action.

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