| Contact:
Jeff Morgan, GHF
press@globalheritagefund.org
(650) 325 7520
Cheryl Fenske, DMOA
dmoa@gti.net
(973) 605-2121
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
GLOBAL HERITAGE
FUND AND THE WORLD BANK
HOST THE FIRST IRAQ HERITAGE CONGRESS DEDICATED
TO SAVING ENDANGERED WORLD HERITAGE SITES
Palo Alto, CA (June 3rd, 2004)
Global Heritage
Fund (GHF) and the The World Bank will partner with
Iraq’s Minister of Culture and State Board of
Antiquities to conduct a 8-day workshop for thirty
leading Iraqi site directors and conservators June
15-22nd in Petra, Jordan.
The mission of the Iraq Heritage Congress
is to develop world-class master conservation plans
over the coming year for protection and preservation
of the priceless historical and cultural sites in
Iraq, according to Jeff Morgan, Executive Director
of the GHF and Christiaan Poortman, World Bank Vice
resident for Middle East and North Africa. world.
Event UNESCO, the Jordanian Ministry
of Culture and Tourism, the Oriental Institute at
University of Chicago, Brown University, the American
Center for Oriental Research (ACOR) and the Petra
National Trust also are participating in the Iraq
Heritage Congress.
While security remains a primary concern
in Iraq, this is a critical time for Iraqi officials
and regional and international organizations to begin
to set priorities and create the basis for conservation
funding from governments, agencies, banks and private
sector conservancies like Global Heritage Fund. Iraq
possesses many of the mankind’s most ancient
archaeological sites, but these wonders of the “cradle
of civilization” are still in their infancy
for research, tourism development and heritage management.
Most site directors are without resources to protect
these ancient treasures from looting, vandalism and
destruction.
“Today we have the experience
and understanding to reverse the devastation of these
world-class ancient sites, create new opportunities
for developing countries like Iraq to become financially
stable through sustainable tourism, and keep these important
treasures from humankind’s past in our future,”
said Morgan. “At current rates of destruction,
there is at least one world heritage-class site lost
each year in the Middle East, and we can’t afford
to lose one more.”
Thirty leading Iraqi site directors
and archaeological conservators will
participate in an intense program of
site management and planning workshops led by international
experts in funding sources, technology and site management
and planning. Participants from the Iraq Antiquities
Department’s goal is to improve their own professional
skills and to enhance their ability to acquire funding
and expertise from international donor agencies.
Sites represented by Iraqi conservation
leaders who will be attending the Iraq Heritage Congress
in Petra include: Nineveh, Nimrud, Hatra, Ashur, Babylon,
Samarra, Ukhaidhir, Ur, Aqar Quf, Ctesiphon, Tell
Harmal and National Site Museums.
The primary emphasis of the workshops
will be to complete drafts for site management plans
for each participating Iraqi Heritage site. These
plans will:
- provide a framework to guide conservation
of archaeological and cultural heritage sites in
contexts to their urban and natural surroundings;
- identify potential economic opportunities
for sustainable tourism and private enterprise to
support for long-term conservation;
- form the basis for legislation and
designation of protected national parks, monuments
or preserves;
- provide guidance in conservation
work and archaeological research and exploration.
Global Heritage Fund is working with
Iraq’s Minister of Culture and State Board of
Antiquities to develop state-of-the-art, comprehensive
site management plans for Iraq’s most endangered
world heritage sites. GHF hopes to accelerate funding
for protection and preservation of these ancient treasures
by helping directly in the development of world-class
site management plans based on the Burra Charter developed
by the International Council of Monuments and Sites
(ICOMOS) and the UNESCO World Heritage Convention.
About Global Heritage Fund
Global Heritage Fund is the leading international
conservancy preserving endangered world heritage sites
in developing countries. The conservancy’s goal
is to enable successful, long-term preservation of
humankind’s most important archaeological sites
and ancient townscapes, creating new opportunities
for economic growth. Global Heritage Fund is a registered
non-profit international conservancy based in Palo
Alto, California.
The role of the Global Heritage Fund is to develop
comprehensive Master Conservation Plans, provide early
matching grants and training, build local institutions
and promote sustainable tourism development to further
permanent protection for global cultural treasures.
To view GHF’s Master Conservation Planning Guidelines,
see:
GHF Master Conservation Planning
Guidelines
http://www.globalheritagefund.org/all/GHFMasterPlanGuidelines62004.pdf
Agenda - GHF-World Bank Iraq
Heritage Congress – June 15-22nd, 2004, Petra
Jordan
http://www.globalheritagefund.org/all/IraqHeritageCongress62004agenda.pdf
At the very heart of GHF’s conservation
efforts are the organization’s Leaders in Conservation,
the Advisory Board, and Trustees for Global Heritage,
a distinguished network of philanthropists and foundations
committed to preserving and protecting these one-of-a-kind
archaeological sites and ancient buildings.
About The World Bank
The World Bank Group’s mission is to fight poverty
and improve the living standards of people in the
developing world. It is a development Bank that provides
loans, policy advice, technical assistance and knowledge
sharing services to low and middle income countries
to reduce poverty. The Bank promotes growth to create
jobs and to empower poor people to take advantage
of these opportunities.
The Bank's lending and advisory services
continued to grow, focusing on work at the country
level and reflecting the Bank's focus on its corporate
and global public goods priorities. It provided debt
relief to some of the world's poorest nations and
extended this relief to countries emerging from conflict.
The Bank's knowledge sharing activities continued
to expand, leading to participatory activities with
governments, nongovernmental organizations, private
sector representatives, and donor government colleagues.
top |