Press
Release No.2002-58
YUGOSLAVIA PROMISES
TO PUNISH ATTACKS AGAINST
CULTURAL PROPERTY IN WARTIME
Paris, September 6 - The Federal Republic of Yugoslavia has pledged
to set up legal procedures to punish attacks on cultural property
in wartime by signing of the Second Protocol of the Convention
for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed
Conflict, otherwise known as the Hague Convention.
UNESCO Director-General
Koïchiro Matsuura, who received the signature in Belgrade
last August 27, called today on all countries that had not yet
done so to sign the Protocol, which was adopted on March 26, 1999
at a diplomatic conference convened by UNESCO.
"The Federal
Republic of Yugoslavia was the 15th country* to become party to
this new legal instrument," he noted, "and the second
former Yugoslav republic to sign. I am pleased about this because
it helps create a climate of confidence in the region. I hope
it will encourage many other countries to do the same."
Wars have always brought
total or partial destruction of irreplaceable cultural heritage
such as monuments, archaeological sites, works of art, rare books,
archives and museums. To try to reduce these losses, the international
community adopted the Hague Convention in 1954, to which was added
a First Protocol banning the export of cultural property from
occupied territories.
But the agreement
proved hard to enforce. Apart from causing very heavy human and
material losses, the international conflicts and civil wars of
the past half-century have led to the destruction of a huge amount
of cultural heritage, often deliberately targeted, as seen in
former Yugoslavia, Cambodia and Afghanistan, among others.
This is why, in the
1990s, UNESCO deemed it necessary to add a Second Protocol to
the Hague Convention. This Second Protocol reinforces the legal
responsibility of those who destroy cultural property. In other
words, a soldier or other official who attacks or orders an attack
on a protected monument could be arrested, extradited and tried,
if necessary before an international court.
The Protocol also
applies to civil wars. It also allows for the establishment of
an Intergovernmental Committee to provide extra protection for
some cultural property and to monitor implementation of the Protocol.
The committee will have access to a special voluntary fund which
could be used, for example, to provide emergency help when needed.
UNESCO will provide the secretariat for this Committee.
Only 15 countries
have so far signed the Second Protocol, five short of the 20 needed
for it to go into effect. The Hague Convention has been signed
by 103 States Parties.
****
* The 14 other signatories
are Argentina, Austria, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Bulgaria, Cyprus,
El Salvador, Libya, Lithuania, the former Yugoslav republic of
Macedonia, Nicaragua, Panama, Qatar and Spain.
****
Contact: Sophie
Boukhari
Bureau of Public Information, Editorial Section
Tel: (+33) (0)1 45 68 17 03
E-mail: s.boukhari@unesco.org