20.000 Archeological Sites Threatened in the MENA Region: War a Major Cause

Published May 25th, 2017 - 03:00 GMT
The 2,000-year-old city of Palmyra has been listed as a World Heritage site. (AFP)
The 2,000-year-old city of Palmyra has been listed as a World Heritage site. (AFP)

While Daesh "the Islamic State" carries out its notorious broad-based campaign in Palmyra of vandalism and cultural cleansing, there are another 20,000 archeological sites across the Middle East and North Africa that are also at severe risk.

Last month, an archaeological preservation project launched an online English and Arabic-language database to raise awareness and urge state officials in affected countries to take protective measures. The project, called Endangered Archaeology in the Middle East and North Africa (EAMENA), has developed a spatial database which provides the level of risk the site is facing and its historical background.

 

With the rise of the Islamic State and extremism throughout the region, the need for such cultural preservation is palpable. According to a 2014 report from right-wing think tank the Gatestone Institute, called “The Destruction of the Middle East,” the heritage of centuries has been wiped out in little more than a year.

However, since many of these regions of at-risk ruins are located in war zones, according to a press release, “the project uses satellite imagery to rapidly record and make available information about archaeological sites and landscapes which are under threat.”

According to the EAMENA website, “Whilst not all damage and threats to the archaeology of the MENA region can be prevented, they can be monitored and mitigated.”

“The archaeology of the Middle East and North Africa is exceptionally rich and diverse, giving insight into some of the earliest and most significant cultures in human history,” said Oxford University’s Dr. Robert Bewley, director of EAMENA project. “Those seeking to deliberately damage archaeological sites are attacking the cultural heritage of all of us.”

Perhaps with the tools found in this database, the world may be one step closer to an archeological neighborhood watch.

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