Gulf News

Saudi, Omani Mumbai sites on Unesco list

Al Ahsa oasis carries traces of human occupation dating back to Neolithic times

-

Al Ahsa oasis, ancient city of Qalhat, Victorian Gothic and Art Deco Ensembles get World Heritage status |

Unesco added Saudi Arabia’s Al Ahsa Oasis and Oman’s ancient city of Qalhat to its World Heritage List on Friday, the world cultural body said.

Authoritie­s in Riyadh, as well as Muscat, have put tourism high on their economic agendas as Gulf states look to diversify their oil-dependent economies.

Saudi Arabia’s lush Al Ahsa oasis is dotted with yet-tobe-excavated archaeolog­ical sites, and carries traces of human occupation dating back to Neolithic times. Al Ahsa “was a commercial centre for the Hajar territory of Bahrain,” reads the Saudi submission to Unesco.

“Archaeolog­ical evidence shows that it exchanged products from southern Arabia and Persia as well as throughout the Arabian Peninsula.”

Riyadh’s tourism drive, backed by Crown Prince Mohammad Bin Salman, has not shied from highlighti­ng pre-Islamic heritage in the kingdom.

Oman’s Qalhat also dates back to pre-Islamic times.

The port city on Oman’s Indian Ocean coast was once a key hub for trade in goods including Arabian horses to Chinese porcelain, according to the Omani submission. The case of Qalhat also demonstrat­es the power women could hold in Arabian society at the time.

“In the 13th century ... the governor Ayaz split his presence between Hormuz and Qalhat, which in his absence was ruled by his wife Maryam,” the submission reads.

“She, Bibi Maryam, is said to have built the Great Friday Mosque and a mausoleum for her late husband. She continued ruling after her husband’s death until at least 1319.”

Prestigiou­s designatio­n

The World Heritage designatio­n is a prestigiou­s one for the Gulf states, looking to make their mark as culturally rich, safe tourist destinatio­ns.

The Unesco gathering in neighbouri­ng Bahrain however comes at a sensitive time for the world body as it scrambles for funding following Washington’s withdrawal last year.

US President Donald Trump’s administra­tion pulled out of Unesco citing its continuing “anti-Israel bias”, six years after the organisati­on allowed the Palestinia­ns to join.

Israel’s ambassador to Unesco said on Tuesday he was urging his government to reconsider its decision to quit the body, saying it had halted its “anti-Israeli resolution­s” over the past year.

 ??  ?? Ruins of the 13th century tomb of Bibi Maryam at Qalhat, near Sur in eastern Oman. Right: The Qasr Ebrahim Mosque in the Al Ahsa oasis in Saudi Arabia. Unesco added the sites on its World Heritage List.
Ruins of the 13th century tomb of Bibi Maryam at Qalhat, near Sur in eastern Oman. Right: The Qasr Ebrahim Mosque in the Al Ahsa oasis in Saudi Arabia. Unesco added the sites on its World Heritage List.
 ?? AFP ?? Spain’s ambassador to Unesco Maria Teresa Lizaranzu Perinat (second from right) congratula­tes the Omani team after Qalhat was added to Unesco’s World Heritage List.
AFP Spain’s ambassador to Unesco Maria Teresa Lizaranzu Perinat (second from right) congratula­tes the Omani team after Qalhat was added to Unesco’s World Heritage List.
 ?? Courtesy: François Cristofoli ??
Courtesy: François Cristofoli

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates