UNESCO seeks to restore Mosul’s credibility

Reconstruction of Iraq's second city will give United Nations' cultural agency window to revive its fortunes.

 

PARIS - The United Nations' cultural agency wants to use the reconstruction of Iraq's second city Mosul as a way to restore its credibility and show how a fraying multilateral order can be revived, its director general said on Monday.

Officially entitled the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation, Paris-based UNESCO is best known for designating and protecting world heritage sites, from the Galapagos Islands to the tombs of Timbuktu.

It was plunged into turmoil almost a year ago after the United States pulled out, striking a blow to multilateralism and raising questions over the funding of an agency founded after World War Two.

While most of its activities are uncontroversial, UNESCO has seen internal political fights between some of its 195 member states in recent years that have paralysed its work, notably on issues related to the Holy Land.

Those culminated in the United States and Israel announcing their withdrawal from the organisation, accusing it of anti-Israel bias, just days ahead of the new Director General Audrey Azoulay's appointment in October 2017.

Almost a year later, Azoulay has sought to refocus the agency on its fundamentals, with Mosul's reconstruction at the centre of that effort.

"At a time when multilateralism is sometimes being questioned, the objective and magnitude of this initiative shows exactly why an organisation like UNESCO is important," Azoulay told Reuters ahead of a conference in Paris on Mosul.

A burnt area at the UNESCO-listed ancient city of Hatra, south of Mosul

Partnering with the Iraqi government, UNESCO wants to position itself as the go-to coordinator to rebuild some of the city's landmarks that were turned to rubble by urban warfare between Islamic State militants and the U.S.-backed coalition.

Mosul needs at least $2 billion of reconstruction aid, according to government estimates. Azoulay said she wanted to restore the city's heartbeat, diversity and history, while using UNESCO's educational programmes to combat extremism.

The agency is spearheading the restoration of the city's market, the central library at its university, two churches and a Yazidi temple.

Its biggest project, funded with $50 million from the United Arab Emirates, is restoring the Grand al-Nuri Mosque, famous for its eight-century-old leaning minaret, which was blown up by Islamic State militants.

The political tension in Baghdad following elections, the unrest in the southern port city of Basra over the last week, and ongoing security threats from Islamic State inevitably raise questions as to how much can actually be achieved.

"We're fully aware of Mosul's specificities and the difficulties on the ground ... but it's exactly because the situation is still fragile that we need to act," Azoulay said.