[CPProt.net] Man, nature threaten Asia's cultural landmarks, experts

MSN CPPnet (Ton Cremers) museum-security at museum-security.org
Tue Aug 16 07:23:40 CEST 2005


Man, nature threaten Asia's cultural landmarks, experts
15 Aug 2005 11:00:29 GMT

Source: Reuters

By Chawadee Nualkhair

BANGKOK, Aug 15 (Reuters) - From India's Taj Mahal to Cambodia's Angkor Wat,
Asia's cultural landmarks are threatened by man and nature and more must be
done to protect them, experts said on Monday.

Earthquakes, floods, civil strife and looting loom large as potential
threats, while the more mundane ravages wreaked by tourists could turn
ancient attractions into victims of their own popularity.

"The greatest threat is actually people like ourselves who do not have much
appreciation for cultural heritage and often go overboard to try to get
income from tourism," Suvit Yodmani, executive director of the Asian
Disaster Preparedness Center, told Reuters.

Museum curators, architects and academics from eight Asian nations are
meeting in Bangkok for the next two weeks to learn new ways to protect their
cultural heritage back home.

They will study how to draw up complicated contingency plans and learn more
simple solutions like using catgut to secure museum displays in quake-prone
areas such as Turkey.

The impact of increasing tourism, the motor for many developing economies
including Cambodia, which lures thousands of tourists a year to its Angkor
Wat temples, would also be debated.

"Asia is the highest natural and man-made disaster zone on earth," said Earl
Kessler, the Center's deputy executive director.

Delegates from Japan to Sri Lanka will draw up their own disaster management
plans upon returning to their home countries. In eight months, the group
will gather again to review their efforts.

"This is a management issue. It's not a pro-forma recipe for security," said
Kessler.

Organised by the Getty Conservation Institute, the International Center for
the Study of the Preservation and Restoration of Cultural Property (ICCROM)
and the International Council of Museums (ICOM), the training course comes
at a time of increasing focus on security for cultural artefacts.

Rioters looted the Iraq National Museum in Baghdad in April 2003, stealing
an estimated 10,000 items from museum displays, according to ICOM secretary
general John Zvereff.

Roughly 5-6,000 of those items have been recovered, helped by the sharing of
information and documentation of stolen items.

While disaster plans naturally concentrate on saving lives and repairing
damaged property, the preservation of culturally important sites and
artefacts also plays a role in rehabilitating communities hit hard by
disaster.

"Obviously there are very important priorities following a disaster to do
with the saving of human lives," said ICCROM director-general Nicholas
Stanley-Price.

"Culture plays an important role in that recovery process." 




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