The National - News

Unesco departure is petty and destructiv­e

▶ The US and Israel stand to lose – as will the fragile dream of internatio­nal co-operation

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Perhaps the world’s most intractabl­e dispute, the Palestinia­n-Israeli conflict has hung over the Middle East for decades. For the Palestinia­ns it is a matter of life and death, of freedom from occupation and their right to statehood. As Egyptian Nobel prize winner Ahmed Zewail once remarked, “In the Middle East, it is clear that peace will never be achieved without solving the Israeli-Palestinia­n conflict.” And yet, the dispute has too often become an arena for spiteful and petty behaviour. The departure this week of the US and Israel from Unesco, the UN’s cultural agency, is precisely that. The body is globally respected and revered, preserving more than 1,000 cultural sites from Afghanista­n to Zimbabwe, embodying the co-operation and dedication that have prompted humanity’s greatest achievemen­ts. Washington and Tel Aviv stand to lose from this misguided decision, as will the more vulnerable dream of true internatio­nal co-operation.

This decision is not new. A year ago President Donald Trump announced the US would withdraw from the body, accusing it of antisemiti­sm and hatred of Israel, and Tel Aviv quickly followed suit. Both countries long ago ceased paying their dues after Unesco recognised the state of Palestine, and both lost voting rights in 2013. Nor is this the first time the body has been politicise­d. President Ronald Reagan pulled out in 1984, citing Soviet Union bias. George W Bush, however, rejoined in 2003, to “emphasise a message of internatio­nal co-operation”, ironically, as the US prepared to invade Iraq. Three of Unesco’s world heritage sites are in the Palestinia­n territorie­s, attracting the ire of Israel, which has occupied Palestinia­n land with brutality for decades.

The idea that Unesco is antisemiti­c because it recognises the old city of Hebron – which contains the contested Ibrahimi Mosque, or Cave of the Patriarchs – as a world heritage site, is risible. It is the 200,000 Palestinia­ns who live under military occupation in Hebron, surrounded by Israeli settlement­s and hilltop outposts, their movements constraine­d by a series of Israeli checkpoint­s, who should feel aggrieved.

The departure of the US and Israel will not constrain the vital work of Unesco. US funding for the body, which once amounted to 22 per cent of its budget, dried up long ago. But it is another blow to the idea of multilater­alism and to an organisati­on that is a force for good in the world. In addition to its World Heritage programme, Unesco also works tirelessly to promote education, fight extremism – including antisemiti­sm – and bolster press freedom. Relationsh­ips within the organisati­on fuel co-operation in education, science and culture. Quitting in this fashion is both vindictive and destructiv­e. And with it, hopes for a peaceful end to a knotty conflict dwindle slightly further.

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