Israel may reconsider UNESCO exit: ambassador
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Israel may reconsider UNESCO exit: ambassador
French Director-General of United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Audrey Azoulay, flanked by Mechtild Rössler, Director of the Division for Heritage, speaks during a press conference on the sidelines of the 42nd session of the world heritage meetings in the Bahraini capital Manama, on June 25, 2018. The meeting which runs until the 4th of July 2018 will review 30 new sites to consider which of them will be added to the World Heritage List. The Committee will also examine the state of conservation of One hundred and seventy five (157) sites already on the World Heritage List. Fifty-four (54) of those sites are also on the List of World Heritage in Danger. The committee will also determine if it will remove the Historic Center of Shakhrisyabz in Uzbekistan from World Heritage List. AFP.



PARIS (AFP).- Israel's ambassador to UNESCO said Tuesday he was urging his government to reconsider its decision to quit the UN cultural body, saying it had halted its "anti-Israeli resolutions" over the past year.

Israel and the United States both announced on October 12 that they would leave the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization over resolutions critical of the Jewish state.

But ambassador Carmel Shama-Hacohen said there had been a change of tone under the Paris-based agency's new chief Audrey Azoulay, a former French culture minister who was elected last year.

"What I'm going to recommend to my ministry and my government is at least to reconsider our decision," Shama-Hacohen told journalists by telephone.

"It could be postponing the date of leaving for one year or something like that," he suggested, which would delay the scheduled departure until at least December 2019.

He spoke as Israeli, Palestinian and Jordanian officials adopted amended versions of last year's decisions by UNESCO's world heritage committee to list the Old City of Jerusalem and its walls, as well as Hebron in the West Bank, as endangered sites.

The new resolutions -- adopted through a rare consensus -- keep the two sites on the list, but remove phrasing which Israel had considered aggressive.

Shama-Hacohen said that under Azoulay's leadership there had been a "new spirit and new energy", noting: "We haven't had any anti-Israeli resolutions at UNESCO for one year."

Staying put would be "a miracle", he added, "but there is an option for it."

Azoulay welcomed Tuesday's consensus between the usually feuding parties, calling it "a win-win situation".

She said she hoped it would "allow a period with less tension that should open the way for more UNESCO work on the ground".

Tensions have bubbled since UNESCO controversially admitted Palestine as a member state in 2011 -- a move opposed by the US and Israel, who argue that any recognition of Palestinian statehood must await a negotiated Middle East peace deal.

The US cut funding to UNESCO over the decision, before announcing its departure last year in a move that underlined a drift away from multilateral institutions under President Donald Trump.



© Agence France-Presse










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