Closing ceremony of World Heritage Committee brings to life the ancient culture of Angkor

Friday, 28 June 2013
access_time 1 min read

Some 500 of the 1400 participants of the 37th session of the World Heritage Committee made the journey from Phnom Penh to Siam Reap and visited the Terrace of the Elephants at Angkor Thom ahead of the closing ceremony of the event.

The stone elephants that flank the impressive platform built some eight centuries ago by Angkor's King Jayavarman VII for public ceremonies were surrounded by live elephants as the delegates filed into the celebrated World Heritage site before moving on to the ceremony itself.

Performed under the leadership of the Committee’s Chair, Deputy Prime Minister Sok An, the closing ceremony brought to life the spirit of ancient Angkor with classical Khmer music and dance, whose origins are recorded in the sculptures and friezes of the World Heritage site.

During the visit to Angkor, the participants who had just inscribed 19 new sites on the World Heritage List, were able to appreciate what international cooperation can achieve.

Indeed, Cambodia’s determination with international led by UNESCO saved Angkor from the effects of war, neglect and pillaging that threatened to deplete its treasures. The site is now held up as an example of how Heritage can serve a country struggling to reclaim its identity and ensure its development after decades of strife.

It also shows that good management can help a country with limited resources benefit from its heritage.

At the close of the session, the World Heritage List numbered 981 sites in 160  States Parties to the World Heritage Convention. The List now numbers 759  cultural, 193 natural and 29 mixed properties.

The Committee also inscribed East Rennell (Solomon Island) on the List of World Heritage in Danger along with the six World Heritage sites of the Syrian Arab Republic. It is now to be hoped that States will be able to cooperate to save these threatened sites as effectively as they did for Angkor which figured on the List of World Heritage in Danger from 1992 to 2004.

Friday, 28 June 2013
access_time 1 min read
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