UNESCO designates nine Mexican sites for special protection

Date:

Share post:

The Mexican government has worked with UNESCO to enter nine heritage sites into its International Register of Cultural Property Under Special Protection in an effort to protect the cultural sites in times of war.

UNESCO designates nine Mexican sites for special protection
Palenque Temple is one of the nine designated sites 
[Credit: WikiCommons]

According to the Mexican Secretariat of Foreign Affairs – a department within the Mexican government – UNESCO will now offer the nine sites “special protection”, with the heritage body and government working together to impose, promote and implement humanitarian international law at the locations.

Included under the new agreement are the pre-Columbian era cities of Palenque, Teotihuacan, Chichen Itza, Yucatan, El Tajin, and Uxmal, as well as the ancient Mayan city of Calakmul and the archaeological zones of Monte Alban and Paquime.

“This corresponds as much to the intention that Mexicans’ cultural heritage will progressively have greater protection as it does to commitments by the Mexican government to impose, promote and implement humanitarian international law,” said a statement by the Secretariat.

The registry process has taken two years to complete, with several institutions including the Secretariat and the National Anthropology and History Institute starting the process in 2013.

The sites will now prepare plans ahead of potential natural or man-made disasters, with UNESCO striving to combat cultural trafficking and working towards prevention or mitigation of damage to the heritage sites.

Author: Tom Anstey | Source: Leisure Management [May 11, 2015]

ADVERTISEMENT

spot_img

Related articles

463-year-old synagogue turned into cattle shed

The Paradesi synagogue at Mattancherry receives several thousand visitors every year from all over the world. People flock...

Footprints claimed as evidence of Ice Age humans in North America need better dating, new research shows

The preserved footprints found in New Mexico’s Lake Otero Basin would upend scientific understanding of how, and when,...

Archaeological museum to be created in Azerbaijan

A museum will be created on the territory of Oguz region of Azerbaijan. It will present the remains...

Dramatic climate changes drove the transition from nomadic hunter-gatherer to settlement and farming societies

Based on the identification of plant remains, Tel Aviv University and Tel-Hai College researchers provide the first detailed...

More on Gladiator school ruins found near Vienna

They lived in cells barely big enough to turn around in and usually fought until they died. This...

Archaeologists in Egypt open large black granite sarcophagus found in Alexandria

Archaeologists in Egypt have opened a large, sealed, black granite sarcophagus dating 2,300 years in the coastal city...

Findings show that the Vikings’ self-image was influenced by Ancient Rome

In the Late Viking Age, a grave was built that looks very similar to one of the most...

Algeria’s ancient pyramid tombs still shrouded in mystery

Dating back centuries, Algeria's pyramid tombs are unique relics of an ancient era but a dearth of research...