The Star Malaysia

New Unesco chief brushes off US pullout

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PARIS: Unesco’s new chief has brushed aside the United States’ decision to walk out of the United Nations cultural body, saying the organisati­on had survived long periods without Washington before.

Former French culture minister Audrey Azoulay, elected on Friday to head Unesco, said the United States was “not the beginning and end” of the agency.

The United States and Israel both announced their pullout last month, accusing Unesco of “anti-Israel bias”.

Azoulay said Washington’s decision was not “a complete surprise, bearing in mind the United States’ current position on multilater­alism”.

“It’s a sovereign decision by a state that I respect, but which at the same time is not the beginning and end of Unesco,” she told France Inter radio yesterday.

“There have been long periods at Unesco – more than 15 years – without the United States, which ultimately came back.”

She added that she did not think quitting was in the United States’ interest and that Unesco would continue “working with American civil society, American universiti­es and American scientists”.

The United States walked out of the 195-member organisati­on once before in 1984 over alleged financial mismanagem­ent and claims of anti-US bias.

It returned in 2002, but in 2011 then president Barack Obama cut off funding after Unesco’s members voted to admit Palestine as a full member.

US ally Israel similarly pulled the funding plug, leaving Unesco short of more than 20% of its budget.

Both countries announced on Oct 12 that they were leaving the organisati­on outright after a series of resolution­s condemning Israel.

US President Donald Trump has already dismayed European partners by pulling out of the Paris climate change agreement and leaving the fate of the hard-fought Iran nucle- ar deal in the hands of Congress.

Azoulay, due to be sworn yesterday, has inherited an embattled agency accused of bloated bureaucrac­y and political bias, as well as struggling with a cash shortage.

Best known for its World Heritage sites including the Grand Canyon and the Great Wall of China, Unesco also promotes education and pushes for improvemen­ts on social issues such as gender equality. — AFP

 ??  ?? New chapter: Azoulay arriving at the Unesco headquarte­rs in Paris. — Reuters
New chapter: Azoulay arriving at the Unesco headquarte­rs in Paris. — Reuters

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