Santa Fe New Mexican

UNESCO declares Hebron’s core as Palestinia­n site

Decision widely criticized by Israel, allies that say organizati­on failed to foster cultural cooperatio­n

- By Isabel Kershner AP FILE PHOTO

UJERUSALEM NESCO, the United Nations cultural organizati­on, declared the ancient and hotly contested core of Hebron in the Israeli-occupied West Bank as a Palestinia­n World Heritage site in danger Friday, despite a concerted diplomatic effort by Israel and the United States to scuttle the decision.

The Palestinia­n Authority administer­s most of Hebron, a predominan­tly Palestinia­n city, under the Oslo peace accords of the 1990s. But an enclave around the historic core remains under full Israeli military control and is also home to several hundred ultra-Orthodox Jewish settlers.

The area designated as a heritage site includes the Cave of the Patriarchs, an ancient shrine revered by Jews, Muslims and Christians as the burial place of the biblical patriarchs and matriarchs. Muslims refer to the imposing stone structure as the Ibrahimi Mosque, using the Arabic name for Abraham, who, according to the Bible, purchased the cave as a burial plot for his wife, Sarah. He is considered a prophet in Islam.

The UNESCO decision, made Friday by secret ballot, was welcomed by Palestinia­ns, who have lobbied for the move for years. But it was widely criticized by Israel and its allies, who accused UNESCO of failing its mandate to foster cultural cooperatio­n.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu of Israel, in a statement, described the UNESCO decision as “delusional.”

“This time they determined that the Cave of the Patriarchs in Hebron is a Palestinia­n site, i.e. not Jewish, and that the site is in danger. Not a ‘Jewish’ site?!” he added, listing the biblical figures said to be buried there.

Netanyahu’s office said Israel would further reduce the membership fees it pays to the United Nations by $1 million a year and would use the funds to establish a Jewish people’s heritage museum in Hebron.

Avigdor Lieberman, the Israeli defense minister of the nationalis­t Yisrael Beiteinu Party, described UNESCO, the United Nations Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organizati­on, as “a politicall­y biased, disgracefu­l and antiSemiti­c organizati­on.”

Adding to the historical sensitivit­ies and outrage, the World Heritage Committee is convening in Krakow, Poland, leading some Israelis to connect the UNESCO vote to a desecratio­n of the memory of Jewish victims of the Holocaust.

Emad Hamdan of the Palestinia­n Hebron Rehabilita­tion Committee told the assembly after Friday’s vote, “We think we are shoulderin­g the responsibi­lity and you proved you are there to shoulder the responsibi­lity.” He said the site needed protecting from “violations” of the “occupation.”

The Palestinia­n Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement that Hebron’s designatio­n as a World Heritage site “transcends geography, religion, politics and ideology.” By having ancient Hebron inscribed on the endangered list, the Palestinia­n request for recognitio­n was fast-tracked, and the World Heritage Committee will be obliged to discuss the case annually.

In the run-up to the vote, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Nikki Haley, sent a letter to two senior U.N. officials asking them to withhold the Hebron designatio­n. She argued that other treasured sites, from the Democratic Republic of Congo to Syria, were under more imminent danger of destructio­n.

Hanan Ashrawi, who leads the Palestine Liberation Organizati­on’s department of culture and informatio­n, described this and other actions taken by Haley at the United Nations as a “one-woman crusade” and an “obsessive and targeted campaign” against the Palestinia­ns.

On Friday, Haley issued a statement calling the vote “an affront to history,” and added: “It undermines the trust that is needed for the Israeli-Palestinia­n peace process to be successful. And it further discredits an already highly questionab­le U.N. agency.”

Israel has long viewed many U.N. bodies as hopelessly biased against it. UNESCO recognized Palestine with a full membership in 2011, and the United States halted funding to the agency afterward. And in 2012, the U.N. General Assembly decided to upgrade the status of Palestine to a nonmember observer state of the United Nations.

The Hebron decision came after a string of recent resolution­s that ignored or minimized the Jewish connection to holy sites in the Old City of Jerusalem also located in contested territory.

For most of the year, the holy site’s prayer area is divided into separate halls for Jewish and Muslim worshipper­s, with separate entrances and each side administer­ed by its own religious authority.

In another contentiou­s move, UNESCO also approved China’s request for special recognitio­n for a vast, traditiona­lly Tibetan region known as Hoh Xil or Kekexili, part of the highaltitu­de plateau in Qinghai province roamed by nomads. The Internatio­nal Campaign for Tibet, an advocacy group critical of China, challenged the move, arguing that it would bolster China’s efforts to resettle tens of thousands of Tibetan nomads into villages.

 ??  ?? Israeli border police in January 2013 stand guard on the site known to Jews as the Tomb of the Patriarchs, and to Muslims as the Ibrahimi Mosque, in the West Bank city of Hebron. The UNESCO World Heritage committee on Friday put the city of Hebron on...
Israeli border police in January 2013 stand guard on the site known to Jews as the Tomb of the Patriarchs, and to Muslims as the Ibrahimi Mosque, in the West Bank city of Hebron. The UNESCO World Heritage committee on Friday put the city of Hebron on...

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