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About time WMF recognised Laas Geel

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Interview with Dr Gaetano Palumbo of the World Monuments Fund (WMF)

 

Dr Palumbo is the World Monuments Fund, Director of archaeological conservation: Africa, Europe, the Middle East and Central Asia. He was a speaker at the Press conference organised yesterday in Paris, France by Somaliland Heritage, a France based association. On the sideline of the Press conference, I spoke with him and began by asking him about the history of the World Monuments Fund (WMF).

 

His response: the World Monument Fund was founded in 1965 in the United States and since then, she has achieved an unmatched record of successful conservation of Monuments in more than 90 countries. Our headquarters is in New York, but we have offices and affiliate organisations in the United Kingdom, France, Spain and Portugal.

 

What is the World Monuments Fund’s Watch List all about?

 

Dr Palumbo: the Watch List was launched in 1995 as the World Monument’s flagship advocacy programme for the WMF. The Watch list is one of our organisation’s most effective tools. It is issued every two years and acts as a potent call to action on behalf of structures in urgent need of immediate help.

 

How do you get informed about structures or historic and prehistoric sites and their need for help?

 

Dr Palumbo: we get informed through locals or the governments of some countries and some times, through foreigners who have visited a part of the world and were attracted by a particular structure or historic site or sites. They send us information via the internet and we try to send our specialists on the field and after which, a committee of experts is gathered for thorough examinations, to find out what steps must be taken to help. The good thing is that, all appeals have always being for the preservation of extraordinary sites.

 

What are the principal causes of the degradation and even destructions of Monuments around the World?

 

Dr Palumbo: they are climate change, sadly always humans, especially through conflicts like that of Iraq or the Somali war, that has destroyed the only museum that was located in Somaliland and finally, the other factor which is also human induced, are pressures from economic development. This has been noticed principally in China and India and also in Latin America. But far less in Africa, however, with the gradual pick up of African economies, it is evident that what has occurred in most developing countries and region earlier mentioned, will certainly happen in Africa. And that is exactly why the WMF intervenes. We would like Africans to be aware of the importance of the preservation of their historic and prehistoric sites and all other important structures. For it will help define things clearly especially the perception of the World toward African histories and traditions. And this is also why the Las Geel prehistoric site located in Somaliland holds all her importance.

 

Can you reasonably say your organisation has succeeded in raising awareness on the importance of Monuments?

 

Dr Palumbo: Oh yes. The shining example is Africa. On our Watch list, African sites, have recorded a leap. Note worthy is the increase presence of sub-Saharan awareness, hence many of their historic and prehistoric sites are present on our Top 100 most endangered Monument sites for 2008. The selected African countries and their historic sites are Algeria: the Medracen and el- Khroub sites and also the Numidian Royal Mausolea located in the city of Constantine, Burkina-Faso : Loropeni Ruins, Egypt: Aqsunqur Mosque ( Blue Mosque) in Cairo, Shunet el Zabib in Abydos and the West Bank of the Nile in Luxor, Eritrea: Derbush Tomb in the city of Massawa, Ethiopia: Mohammadali House in Addis Ababa, Ghana: Wa Naa’s Palace in Wa, Libya: Wadi Mathendous Rock arts in Fezzan, Madagascar: Fianarantsoa old city, Mauritania: Chinguetti mosque, Morocco: Al-Azhar Mosque in the city of Fez, Nigeria: Ikom Monoliths of Cross River state, Senegal: Saint Louis Island, Sierra Leon: Freetown Historic Monuments, Somaliland: Las Geel Rock Art, Tanzania: Kilwa Historic sites and Zimbabwe: Bumbusi National Monument in Matabeleland.

 

 

Identifying and enlisting prehistoric sites on your Watch List is noble, but does your organisation provide any financial assistance? Let’s say for example, the Las Geel prehistoric site in Somaliland?

 

 

Dr Palumbo: Oh yes. But Somaliland and in particular, the Las Geel prehistoric site, is new, and should they ( Somaliland Heritage and the Somaliland government) make any such request, it will be studied. However, we do help financially. And since 1996, the WMF has disbursed more than $ 47 million for 214 sites in 74 countries.

 

 

Elie B. Smith: thank you very much for sparing us some of your precious time to inform us about your organisation.

 

 

Dr Gaetano Palumbo: You are welcome.

 

Web site of the World Monuments Fund: www.wmf.org.

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AYOUB   

Architectural, cultural gems imperilled

JENNIFER PELTZ

Associated Press

June 6, 2007 at 2:06 PM EDT

NEW YORK — Rising seas, spreading deserts, intensifying weather and other harbingers of climate change are threatening cultural landmarks from Canada to Antarctica, the World Monuments Fund said Wednesday releasing its latest list of the world's most endangered sites.

This year's list is the first to add global warming to a roster of forces that the organization says are threatening humanity's architectural and cultural heritage. Other factors include political conflict, pollution, development and tourism pressures, and a thirst for modernity in buildings and lifestyles.

"On this list, man is indeed the real enemy," Bonnie Burnham, the president of the New York-based fund, said in a statement. "But, just as we caused the damage in the first place, we have the power to repair it."

The U.S. list includes sites as diverse as historic Route 66, the fabled east-west highway flanked by eccentric, deteriorating attractions; the New York State Pavilion, a rusting remnant of the 1964 World's Fair in Queens; and the historic neighbourhoods of New Orleans, where the Monuments Fund pointed to the destruction done by Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and the potential for more damage from future storms and rising waters.

Internet Links

World Monuments Fund  

New Orleans is among at least six historic places with futures clouded by a changing climate, it said.

The fund's "100 Most Endangered Sites" list, issued every two years, is intended as a cultural clarion call, and the organization suggests it has been a successful one.

More than three-quarters of the places listed in previous years are no longer imperilled, according to the organization, which has given more than $47-million to help save some 214 sites since 1996.

This year's list includes sites in 59 countries, ranging from Afghanistan to Zimbabwe. The United States is home to more than any other country, with seven sites or types of sites — one entry is the "Main Street Modern"-style public buildings that symbolized progress after the Second World War.

There are six sites each in Peru, and five each in India and Turkey.

On Herschel Island, Canada, melting permafrost threatens ancient Inuit sites and a historic whaling town. In Chinguetti, Mauritania, the desert is encroaching on an ancient mosque. In Antarctica, a hut once used by British explorer Captain Robert Falcon Scott has survived almost a century of freezing conditions but is now in danger of being engulfed by increasingly heavy snows.

Other sites face different perils. Political conflicts are clouding the future of Iraq's cultural heritage sites and the remains of two ancient, giant Buddha statues in Afghanistan's province of Bamiyan, in the monuments fund's view. The statues were destroyed by the Taliban regime in 2001, but there have been some efforts to restore them.

Growth pressures are being felt in places such as Ireland's Hill of Tara, an earthen fort where Celtic chieftains jockeyed for power and legend says St. Patrick confronted paganism. A planned highway, intended to ease commuting between Dublin and a northwestern suburb, would pass near the hill.

Other places, such as Peru's famed Machu Picchu, are considered threatened because of their own popularity. A new bridge recently opened to cater to backpackers headed to Machu Picchu, although government cultural experts said it could bring too many tourists to the delicate Inca ruins.

A group of experts chose the sites on the World Monuments Fund list from hundreds of nominations, submitted by governments, conservationists and others. The selections were based on the sites' importance and the urgency of the dangers to them, the organization said.

World Monuments Fund's 100 Most Endangered Sites

 The names appear as listed by the organization.

 

AFGHANISTAN

Buddhist Remains of Bamiyan

Murad Khane, Kabul

Tepe Narenj, Kabul

 

ALGERIA

Medracen and el-Khroub

Numidian Royal Mausolea, Constantine

 

ANTARCTICA

Scott's Hut and the Explorers' Heritage of Antarctica, Ross Island

 

ARGENTINA

Brener Synagogue, Moises Ville

 

ARMENIA

Kumayri District, Alexandrapol

 

AUSTRALIA

Dampier Rock Art Complex, Burrup Peninsula

 

AZERBAIJAN

Khinalyg Village

 

BANGLADESH

Sonargaon-Panam City

 

BOSNIA/HERZEGOVINA

Sarajevo City Hall

 

BRAZIL

Porangatu Historic District

 

BULGARIA

Novae Archaeological Site, Svishtov

 

BURKINA FASO

Loropeni Ruins

 

CANADA

Herschel Island, Yukon

 

CHILE

Montemar Institute of Marine Biology, Vina del Mar

 

CHINA

Modern Shanghai

Xumishan Grottoes, Guyuan County

 

CYPRUS

Famagusta Walled City

 

EGYPT

Aqsunqur Mosque (Blue Mosque), Cairo

Shunet el-Zebib, Abydos

West Bank of the Nile, Luxor

 

ERITREA

Derbush Tomb, Massawa

 

ETHIOPIA

Mohammadali House, Addis Ababa

 

FRANCE

Epailly Chapel of the Order of the Temple, Courban

 

GEORGIA

Gelati Monastery and Academy, Kutaisi

 

GHANA

Wa Naas Palace, Wa

 

GREECE

Lesvos Historic Churches

Pella Macedonian Tombs

 

GUATEMALA

Capitanes Generales Palace, Antiqua Guatemala

Ceibal Archaeological Site, Sayaxche

 

INDIA

Amber Town, Rajasthan

Chettinad, Chennai

Jantar Mantar, Jaipur

Leh Old Town, Ladakh

Srinigar Heritage Zone

 

INDONESIA

Kotagede Heritage District

 

IRAQ

Cultural Heritage Sites of Iraq

 

IRELAND

Tara Hill

Vernon Mount, Cork

 

ITALY

Transhumance Cultural Landscape, Molise Region

Farnese Nymphaeum, Rome

Fenestrelle Fortress, Turin

Viscontian Bridge-Dam, Valleggio sul Mincio

 

JAMAICA

Falmouth Historic Town

 

JORDAN

Khirbet et-Tannur, Tafilah

Qusayr Amra, al-Azraq

 

JORDAN/ISRAEL

Jordan River Cultural Landscape

 

LIBYA

Wadi Mathendous Rock Art, Fezzan

 

MACEDONIA

Mother of God Peribleptos Church, Ohrid

 

MADAGASCAR

Fianarantsoa Old City

 

MALTA

Fort St. Elmo, Valletta

 

MAURITANIA

Chinguetti Mosque

 

MEXICO

Huaca Historic Neighborhood, Veracruz

Chihuahua Missions

Monte Alban Archaeological Site, Oaxaca

Teuchtitlan-Guachimontones Archaeological Zone

 

MOROCCO

Al-Azhar Mosque, Fez

 

NIGERIA

Ikom Monoliths of Cross River State

 

PAKISTAN

Shikarpoor Historic City Center

 

PALESTINIAN Territories

Church of the Holy Nativity, Bethlehem

 

PERU

Laraos Terraces

Lima Historic City Center

Machu Picchu Historic Sanctuary

Macusani-Corani Rock Art

San Pedro Apostol de Andahuaylillas Church

Santa Catalina Monastery, Arequipa

 

RUSSIA

Icon of the Mother of God of the Sign Church, Teplovo

Mendeleev Tower, St. Petersburg

St. Petersburg Historic Skyline

 

SENEGAL

Saint Louis Island

 

SIERRA LEONE

Freetown Historic Monuments

 

SLOVAKIA

BanskDa Stiavnica Calvary Complex

 

SOMALILAND

Las Geel Rock Art

 

SPAIN

Joan MirDo Foundation, Barcelona

 

SRI LANKA

Kandy Sacred City

 

SWEDEN

Ljungberg Hall, Borlange City

 

SYRIA

Cyrrhus (Nebi Houri), Azaz

Old Damascus

 

TANZANIA

Kilwa Historic Sites

 

TURKEY

ECukur Han, Ankara

Hasankeyf

Istanbul Historic Walls

Meryem Ana (Mother of God) Church, GJoreme, Cappadocia

Red Church, GJuzelyurt, Sivrihisar, Cappadocia

 

UKRAINE

Pidhirtsi Castle

 

UNITED KINGDOM

Mavisbank House, Midlothian, Scotland

Richhill House, Armagh City, Northern Ireland

St. Peters College, Cardross, Scotland

Wiltons Music Hall, London

 

UNITED STATES

Florida Southern Historic Campus, Lakeland, Fla.

Historic Neighborhoods of New Orleans, La.

Historic Route 66

Main Street Modern

New York State Pavilion, Queens, N.Y.

Salk Institute, San Diego, Calif.

Tutuveni Petroglyph Site, Hopi Tribal Land, Ariz.

 

UZBEKISTAN

Ayaz Kala, Ellikala

Madrasa Rashid, Bukhara

 

ZIMBABWE

Bumbusi National Monument, Matabeleland

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