Berliner Boersenzeitung - In Iraq, UN culture chief vows to help rebuild

EUR -
AED 4.362149
AFN 78.393849
ALL 96.67333
AMD 448.908336
ANG 2.126233
AOA 1089.200324
ARS 1707.725881
AUD 1.717808
AWG 2.138016
AZN 2.020885
BAM 1.956272
BBD 2.388476
BDT 145.105018
BGN 1.994733
BHD 0.447804
BIF 3527.726353
BMD 1.187787
BND 1.504963
BOB 8.211982
BRL 6.274008
BSD 1.185886
BTN 107.768008
BWP 15.607767
BYN 3.381516
BYR 23280.618354
BZD 2.385063
CAD 1.629203
CDF 2619.069362
CHF 0.923007
CLF 0.026023
CLP 1027.542214
CNY 8.260284
CNH 8.255259
COP 4374.546967
CRC 586.841624
CUC 1.187787
CUP 31.476346
CVE 110.761064
CZK 24.239879
DJF 211.180965
DKK 7.468185
DOP 74.830521
DZD 153.478658
EGP 55.899732
ERN 17.8168
ETB 185.301019
FJD 2.627919
FKP 0.87181
GBP 0.868397
GEL 3.195507
GGP 0.87181
GHS 12.932121
GIP 0.87181
GMD 87.305533
GNF 10387.506836
GTQ 9.101196
GYD 248.109877
HKD 9.261695
HNL 31.280549
HRK 7.535352
HTG 155.417507
HUF 381.56572
IDR 19884.736319
ILS 3.701636
IMP 0.87181
INR 108.93613
IQD 1553.474903
IRR 50035.512848
ISK 145.397138
JEP 0.87181
JMD 186.675051
JOD 0.842197
JPY 183.207775
KES 152.975312
KGS 103.871835
KHR 4778.15312
KMF 498.870729
KPW 1069.028793
KRW 1720.770385
KWD 0.364246
KYD 0.988231
KZT 595.863801
LAK 25584.174275
LBP 106196.128504
LKR 367.158607
LRD 219.392946
LSL 19.016089
LTL 3.507225
LVL 0.718481
LYD 7.488807
MAD 10.777301
MDL 20.005828
MGA 5348.290713
MKD 61.613933
MMK 2494.274616
MNT 4235.728234
MOP 9.524499
MRU 47.292413
MUR 54.068278
MVR 18.35098
MWK 2056.295676
MXN 20.6195
MYR 4.717292
MZN 75.911454
NAD 19.016089
NGN 1678.484982
NIO 43.640532
NOK 11.612519
NPR 172.428646
NZD 1.989281
OMR 0.456696
PAB 1.185886
PEN 3.97696
PGK 5.146242
PHP 70.251611
PKR 332.077741
PLN 4.205668
PYG 7969.923396
QAR 4.323243
RON 5.09715
RSD 117.374723
RUB 90.902634
RWF 1730.217557
SAR 4.453737
SBD 9.649117
SCR 16.544725
SDG 714.460903
SEK 10.618296
SGD 1.508661
SHP 0.891148
SLE 28.978837
SLL 24907.291301
SOS 676.562801
SRD 45.284382
STD 24584.785538
STN 24.505914
SVC 10.376541
SYP 13136.415423
SZL 19.000585
THB 37.0622
TJS 11.070272
TMT 4.157253
TND 3.424526
TOP 2.859905
TRY 51.534619
TTD 8.058945
TWD 37.3705
TZS 3011.602124
UAH 51.127439
UGX 4204.014562
USD 1.187787
UYU 44.500739
UZS 14331.458637
VES 418.416157
VND 31105.162915
VUV 142.256206
WST 3.273052
XAF 656.115342
XAG 0.011042
XAU 0.000235
XCD 3.210053
XCG 2.137216
XDR 0.815997
XOF 656.115342
XPF 119.331742
YER 283.053112
ZAR 19.057223
ZMK 10691.501182
ZMW 23.154588
ZWL 382.466817
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    -1.5400

    82.5

    -1.87%

  • CMSD

    0.0300

    24.16

    +0.12%

  • BCC

    -0.9300

    83.4

    -1.12%

  • NGG

    1.0800

    82.58

    +1.31%

  • GSK

    1.1700

    50.32

    +2.33%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1200

    17

    -0.71%

  • BTI

    -0.1700

    58.99

    -0.29%

  • CMSC

    0.0300

    23.78

    +0.13%

  • RIO

    0.0400

    90.47

    +0.04%

  • RELX

    -0.3900

    39.51

    -0.99%

  • JRI

    0.0500

    13.73

    +0.36%

  • BCE

    -0.0500

    25.15

    -0.2%

  • VOD

    0.0600

    14.23

    +0.42%

  • AZN

    1.2800

    94.23

    +1.36%

  • BP

    0.2300

    36.76

    +0.63%

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.Renner--BBZ)