The Prague Post - In Iraq, UN culture chief vows to help rebuild

EUR -
AED 4.225347
AFN 75.935225
ALL 96.530197
AMD 440.160504
ANG 2.05944
AOA 1055.04179
ARS 1669.155291
AUD 1.767649
AWG 2.073842
AZN 1.959229
BAM 1.958092
BBD 2.316561
BDT 140.205301
BGN 1.95567
BHD 0.433725
BIF 3395.233133
BMD 1.150536
BND 1.503192
BOB 7.947508
BRL 6.168259
BSD 1.150171
BTN 102.074119
BWP 15.526576
BYN 3.920473
BYR 22550.514875
BZD 2.313268
CAD 1.622705
CDF 2555.342112
CHF 0.931123
CLF 0.027683
CLP 1086.014151
CNY 8.199586
CNH 8.200644
COP 4411.732107
CRC 577.388264
CUC 1.150536
CUP 30.489217
CVE 110.882911
CZK 24.37751
DJF 204.473444
DKK 7.465487
DOP 73.987766
DZD 150.418868
EGP 54.542674
ERN 17.258047
ETB 176.175889
FJD 2.624492
FKP 0.88211
GBP 0.88096
GEL 3.123735
GGP 0.88211
GHS 12.569586
GIP 0.88211
GMD 84.571203
GNF 9999.312558
GTQ 8.814315
GYD 240.637893
HKD 8.945007
HNL 30.32851
HRK 7.534523
HTG 150.618888
HUF 386.916198
IDR 19220.862322
ILS 3.745859
IMP 0.88211
INR 101.98056
IQD 1507.20278
IRR 48451.967007
ISK 147.004128
JEP 0.88211
JMD 185.186724
JOD 0.815692
JPY 177.16478
KES 148.706514
KGS 100.614759
KHR 4633.210067
KMF 490.128495
KPW 1035.453494
KRW 1664.97593
KWD 0.353399
KYD 0.958547
KZT 604.192841
LAK 24897.60912
LBP 103204.201786
LKR 350.453181
LRD 211.065701
LSL 19.916034
LTL 3.397236
LVL 0.695948
LYD 6.276191
MAD 10.711652
MDL 19.714586
MGA 5177.413724
MKD 61.592799
MMK 2415.246587
MNT 4126.635895
MOP 9.212121
MRU 45.791129
MUR 52.959252
MVR 17.724036
MWK 1998.481614
MXN 21.39353
MYR 4.81442
MZN 73.577134
NAD 19.915275
NGN 1659.373004
NIO 42.305425
NOK 11.743698
NPR 163.317679
NZD 2.031243
OMR 0.442394
PAB 1.150176
PEN 3.89329
PGK 4.850697
PHP 67.732655
PKR 325.181486
PLN 4.255935
PYG 8142.529205
QAR 4.192825
RON 5.084109
RSD 117.230436
RUB 93.58878
RWF 1671.199381
SAR 4.31503
SBD 9.461809
SCR 15.778774
SDG 690.89339
SEK 10.994061
SGD 1.502531
SHP 0.8632
SLE 26.741488
SLL 24126.174034
SOS 657.286361
SRD 44.362394
STD 23813.782072
STN 24.52924
SVC 10.063778
SYP 12723.470953
SZL 20.096956
THB 37.353889
TJS 10.650742
TMT 4.026878
TND 3.40949
TOP 2.694676
TRY 48.444516
TTD 7.795292
TWD 35.583767
TZS 2830.097659
UAH 48.397039
UGX 4016.788129
USD 1.150536
UYU 45.743534
UZS 13792.073488
VES 257.354528
VND 30287.872658
VUV 140.295125
WST 3.228202
XAF 656.742711
XAG 0.02403
XAU 0.000289
XCD 3.109383
XCG 2.072871
XDR 0.815443
XOF 656.382031
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.460667
ZAR 20.010826
ZMK 10356.203334
ZMW 25.763823
ZWL 370.472275
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    76

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0600

    15.93

    +0.38%

  • NGG

    0.2300

    75.37

    +0.31%

  • RYCEF

    0.1500

    15.1

    +0.99%

  • BCC

    0.9700

    71.38

    +1.36%

  • CMSC

    0.2400

    23.83

    +1.01%

  • RIO

    1.1700

    69.06

    +1.69%

  • AZN

    -0.8800

    81.15

    -1.08%

  • BCE

    0.1000

    22.39

    +0.45%

  • GSK

    -0.1300

    46.69

    -0.28%

  • RELX

    0.2800

    44.58

    +0.63%

  • JRI

    0.0700

    13.77

    +0.51%

  • VOD

    0.0700

    11.27

    +0.62%

  • CMSD

    0.1900

    24.01

    +0.79%

  • BTI

    0.9000

    53.88

    +1.67%

  • BP

    0.5600

    35.68

    +1.57%

In Iraq, UN culture chief vows to help rebuild
In Iraq, UN culture chief vows to help rebuild / Photo: AHMAD AL-RUBAYE - AFP

In Iraq, UN culture chief vows to help rebuild

Wandering Baghdad's legendary book street, recently renovated, the UN's cultural chief pledged on Monday firm support for the rebuilding of Iraq, whose rich heritage has been ravaged by conflict.

Text size:

Years of war and insurgency have taken a heavy toll on the many Mesopotamian, Islamic and Christian treasures in a country home to six UNESCO World Heritage sites.

Iraq is the cradle of civilisations, where writing and the first cities emerged, but decades of unrest have left many priceless cultural treasures damaged or obliterated.

"It's the culture, the education, that were deliberately destroyed, attacked, in a country with a thousands-year-old history," Audrey Azoulay, director-general of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, told AFP.

She spoke during a visit to Al-Mutanabbi Street, which has long drawn bibliophiles and is named after the celebrated 10th-century poet Abul Tayeb al-Mutanabbi.

The mission of Azoulay, a former culture minister in France, comes ahead of the 20th anniversary later this month of the US-led invasion which toppled Saddam Hussein but ushered in the bloodiest period in Iraqi history.

Antiquities have been extensively looted, often by organised crime groups, and many treasures were stolen from the national museum in the capital Baghdad.

More damage was done during the brutal rise of the Islamic State (IS) group a decade later and the battle to dislodge it which devastated large areas in the northern city of Mosul.

Even Al-Mutanabbi Street, a centre of intellectual life with its cafes and books, could not escape the pain. In March 2007 a suicide car bomb killed 30 people and wounded 60 others there.

Among the dead were sons of the Shabandar cafe owner, whom Azoulay sat with on Monday, accompanied by Iraq's culture minister, Ahmed Fakak al-Badrani.

- 'Like nowhere else' -

"These heartbreaks of war, of occupation by IS, deeply bruised Iraqi society," Azoulay said.

"Because of that, UNESCO is committed like nowhere else to mobilise the international community and act directly on the ground."

Since 2018 the agency has raised more than $150 million for projects in Iraq, mostly the reconstruction of Mosul. IS seized the metropolis as its stronghold before being pushed out in 2017, but the battle to retake it reduced the Old City to rubble.

Among the casualties was the 12th-century leaning minaret, nicknamed Al-Hadba, which is part of the UNESCO restoration effort.

"I am here to recover this cultural identity, to help Iraq rebuild, not only the walls, the heritage as we are doing in Mosul, but also all this intangible heritage, this richness linked to education, to know-how, that suffered so much," Azoulay said.

She is due to visit Mosul on Tuesday.

Azoulay also stopped at the national museum whose reopening, she told reporters, is a sign of hope and "allows many Iraqi families to reconnect with this long history".

But a reminder of the country's many challenges came when the power cut out at the end of her briefing, as it often does in the country whose electricity grid is dilapidated.

UNESCO has also declared natural heritage sites in Iraq, including the southern marshlands fed by the Euphrates and the Tigris rivers.

The vast wetlands have been put at severe risk, by draining under Saddam's regime and by climate change and upstream dam construction.

Because of its rivers and water sources, "this country was so fertile," said Azoulay, who met President Abdul Latif Rashid and Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani.

She said she proposed to Iraqi authorities a UNESCO mission to see how it could assist in water management.

T.Kolar--TPP