UNESCO strips English city of Liverpool of its world heritage status
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[July 21, 2021]
LONDON (Reuters) -The English city
of Liverpool has been removed from UNESCO’s list of world heritage sites
after the United Nations' cultural agency found new buildings, including
a football stadium, undermined the attractiveness of its Victorian
docks.
Liverpool was named a World Heritage Site in 2004, joining cultural
landmarks such as the Great Wall of China, the Taj Mahal, and the
Leaning Tower of Pisa. The city is only the third place to be removed
from the prestigious list.
After a vote in China by members of its World Heritage Committee, UNESCO
said on Twitter that Liverpool should be deleted from the international
cultural organisation's list.
Joanne Anderson, the Liverpool mayor, said the decision was
"incomprehensible" and she hopes to appeal.
"I’m hugely disappointed and concerned by this decision to delete
Liverpool’s World Heritage status, which comes a decade after UNESCO
last visited the city to see it with their own eyes," she said. "We will
be working with government to examine whether we can appeal."
The only other sites stripped previously of the title are a wildlife
sanctuary in Oman in 2007 after poaching and habitat loss and the
Dresden Elbe valley in Germany in 2009 when a four-lane motorway bridge
was built over the river.
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People walk on a deserted square, amid the coronavirus disease
(COVID-19) outbreak, in Liverpool, Britain, January 5, 2021.
REUTERS/Phil Noble
The heritage label gives historic sites access to UN
conservation funding as well as featuring in tourist guidebooks
across the world.
The threat of being delisted has hung over Liverpool since 2012
after UNESCO warned that new buildings had changed the city’s
skyline and was destroying the heritage value of its waterfront.
(Reporting by Andrew MacAskill; editing by Sarah Young)
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