Monday, January 20, 2020

Trump’s threat against archaeology – and archaeologists

The shockwaves from US President Donald Trump’s threat to destroy 52 cultural sites in Iran may have receded, overtaken by the latest twists in the deadly game of one-upmanship being played by Washington and Tehran. But there’s still something to learned from it.
One irony shadowing Trump’s contemptuous attitude toward the world’s treasures is that it was America, at a White House conference staged in 1965 by Lyndon B Johnson, that first called for a World Heritage Trust to protect “the world’s … historic sites for the present and the future of the entire world citizenry.” In 1972, that proposal was adopted by the member states of the United Nations, including the US, as the Convention Concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage.
If anything good could be said to have come out of the astonishing proposal by a US president to flout international law, as enshrined in the 1954 Hague Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict, it is the outburst of universal condemnation it provoked. A chorus of disparate voices was raised in protest, in recognition that beyond nationalities, borders and ideological differences we are united by a common heritage transcending passing enmities and allegiances.
Much of that shared heritage is rooted in the Middle East, a region that gave birth to agriculture, organized religion, reading and writing, and the first cities, sowing the seeds of mankind’s flowering across a culturally fertile swath of land extending from Egypt in the west across to Iraq, Iran and beyond.
Modern Iran, the descendant state of the Persian Empire, which at its height in the 6th century BCE extended from Libya to the Indus Valley, is home to more than its share of treasures central to the human story.
Of the 24 sites in Iran awarded World Heritage status by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), perhaps the best known is Persepolis, the capital of the Achaemenid Empire founded by Cyrus the Great and dating from about 500 BCE. On its surviving walls, columns and carvings are written much of the history of modern civilization, and to consider destroying any part of it is – or ought to be – unthinkable.
Another irony is that the US government joined the chorus of international voices raised in condemnation of the destruction of the 1,700-year-old Buddha statues in Bamiyan, Afghanistan, at the hands of the Taliban in 2001 and condemned the cultural havoc wrought by Islamic State (ISIS) at historic sites in Syria and Iraq as recently as 2015.
Now, however, it seems the current occupant of the Oval Office feels comfortable threatening to adopt those same tactics in his ongoing dispute with Iran.
Of all the voices raised against Trump’s grotesque threat, perhaps the most powerful are those of the international archeological community, including the Archaeological Institute of America. Or the World Monuments Fund, recalling the cultural destruction wrought by terrorist groups, “while the aggressors in such instances believe they are acting against ‘the other,’ in the end, they act against themselves.” Mankind, it added, “cannot continue to let political differences threaten one of the few things that serve to unite us all – our shared global heritage.”
It is, of course, in the collaboration around the world among archeologists from different and often opposing nations, and nowhere more so than in the Middle East, that our timeless common humanity is most clearly demonstrated.
Apparently indifferent to the fate of Iranian archeologists, and that of any civilians nearby, Trump appeared also to have failed to consider that archeological sites across the Middle East, including those in Iran, are regularly frequented by the archeologists of many nations, including the US.
Take the 7,000-year-old site of Pardis Tepe in Tehran province, where many experts believe the wheel, the invention that revolutionized human development, may first have turned in about 5,000 BCE. Excavations there have long been the province not only of Iranian archeologists but also of colleagues from a number of British universities.
Despite the deteriorating political situation since Trump pulled the US out of the nuclear deal with Iran and ramped up sanctions against the country, archeologists from Germany and Italy have continued to work on sites in the country, at Persepolis and Firuzabad.
“The Italian team,” says Pierfrancesco Callieri, a professor in the Department of Cultural Heritage at Bologna University and an expert in the archeology of pre-Islamic Iran, “is committed to continue its collaboration with our Iranian colleagues, and we very much hope that [Trump’s] words will not be followed by action.”
American citizens, too, have traveled to Iran on heritage tours organized by the Archaeological Institute of America. This year’s visit, scheduled for April, has been canceled in light of the deterioration of relations between the US and Iran. But a dozen clients had been due to visit 12 UNESCO World Heritage Sites including Persepolis, Pasargadae (the capital of Cyrus the Great), Tehran’s 18th-century Golestan Palace, and the Sassanian religious center of Takht-e Soleiman.
For Trump, the assassination of Qasem Soleimani was designed in part to boost his chances of winning re-election, as became plain on January 9 when he boasted about the killing to an appreciative audience of the faithful at a campaign rally. But how might it have played to his voter base had American missiles not only destroyed millennia of human history, but also killed archeologists from Iran and many other nations?
By going about the universal business of exploring and documenting our common heritage, archeology serves to remind us of what unites us and evokes the power of our mutual past to offer hope of a less divided future. To hold that common heritage in contempt, as Trump has done, is to squander that hope.
This article was provided by Syndication Bureauwhich holds copyright.
Jonathan Gornall
Jonathan Gornall is a British journalist, formerly with The Times, who has lived and worked in the Middle East and is now based in the UK. He specializes in health, a subject on which he writes for the British Medical Journal and others.

Hundreds injured in weekend of Lebanon clashes


Sanaa al-Sheikh, a Lebanese anti-government protester, covers her nose from
 tear gas fired by riot police from behind a barricaded road that leads to parliament
 in central Beirut on January 19, 2020. Photo: AFP

Hundreds injured in weekend of Lebanon clashes

Anti-riot police fire rubber bullets and water cannons at stone-throwing demonstrators in the capital Beirut
Lebanese anti-riot police fired rubber bullets and water cannons at stone-throwing demonstrators in the Lebanese capital Sunday, as hundreds were injured in a weekend of rare violence.
Medics said 90 people were injured in the latest clashes, taking the casualty toll to more than 460 injured in two days.
Unprecedented protests have rocked the Mediterranean country since October 17, with citizens from all religious backgrounds demanding the ouster of a political class viewed as inept, corrupt and responsible for an ever deepening economic crisis.
On Sunday evening, hundreds of protesters gathered in the rain in central Beirut by a barricaded road that leads to parliament manned by heavily deployed security forces.
For a second night in a row, dozens started lobbing stones in the direction of police behind a metal barricade, crying “revolution, revolution
Anti-riot forces responded with water cannons, as well as rubber bullets and a round of tear gas.
The Red Cross said 90 people were injured, including 38 who needed treatment in hospital.
The state-run National News Agency (NNA) said two journalists were hit by rubber bullets, one a cameraman from local television channel Al-Jadeed.
President Michel Aoun called for a “security meeting” on Monday with the interior and defence ministers to discuss the crisis, NNA reported.
But a 34-year-old protester called Mazen said he and others had lost hope in politicians.
“After three months of revolution, they have proven to us that they don’t change, don’t listen, and have nothing to give,” he said.

‘Excessive violence’

On Saturday, at least 377 people were wounded – both protesters and members of the security forces – according to a toll compiled by AFP from figures provided by the Red Cross and Civil Defence.
An AFP photographer said security forces fired rubber bullets at stone-throwing protesters as thick clouds of tear gas covered central Beirut.
Lawyers said more than 40 protesters were arrested on Saturday before being released.
Most were subjected to “excessive violence,” while some were wounded “especially to the head and face, and genitals,” the Committee of Lawyers for the Defence of Protesters said on Facebook.
The lawyers also visited hospitals, from where they reported serious injuries including by rubber bullets.
On Sunday, local television aired the testimonies of relatives of two young men they said were hit in the eyes by rubber bullets.
Security forces said they had opened a probe after a video shared online showed police beating up people believed to be protesters as they were brought to a Beirut police station.
Human Rights Watch condemned what it called “the brutal use of force unleashed by Lebanon’s riot police against largely peaceful demonstrators.”
It accused the riot police on Saturday of “launching tear gas canisters at protesters’ heads, firing rubber bullets in their eyes and attacking people at hospitals and a mosque.”

 ‘Stop wasting time’

Saturday’s clashes began after dozens of protesters threw stones and plant pots at security forces, and tried to charge police lines near parliament with traffic signs.
The security forces responded with water cannons and thick tear gas.
Protesters had called for a week of “anger” over the political leadership’s failure to form a new government even as the country sinks deeper into a financial crisis.
“Another day without a government, another night of violence and clashes,” UN envoy to Lebanon Jan Kubis said on Twitter.
Outgoing prime minister Saad Hariri, who stepped down on October 29, urged political parties to “stop wasting time.”
“Form a government and pave the way towards political and economic solutions,” he said.
Political factions agreed on December 19 to appoint former education minister Hassan Diab as the new premier but have since squabbled over proposed ministers.
Protesters have demanded a new government be comprised solely of independent experts, and exclude all established political parties.
The World Bank has warned the poverty rate in Lebanon could rise from a third to half of the population if the political crisis is not resolved soon.
– AFP

Counting the cost of Australia’s raging inferno

Bushfire damage could be as high as $9 billion and trim .5% off GDP with worst of blazes still to come
Australia’s economy will take years to recover from the bushfires that have devastated four states since September, with the damage bill already estimated at A$5 billion (US$3.4 billion) and the worst of the blazes still to come.
There could also be a significant political cost, as Prime Minister Scott Morrison’s indecisive response and adamant refusal to acknowledge a climate change link to the fires have seen his popularity and support nosedive.
Twenty-eight people have been killed and at least 2,300 homes destroyed as the fires burned through 8.4 billion hectares (50,000 square kilometers) of mostly rural land in New South Wales (NSW), Victoria, South Australia and Queensland — a geographical area bigger than the entire territory of Denmark.
Losses will continue to rise, as the peak period of bushfire activity does not start until February, the hottest month in southeastern Australia. It is expected to drag on well into March unless there is rainfall; some areas have had heavy falls in recent days, but not enough to end the fiery crisis.
With insurance claims of A$1 billion ($690 million) already submitted for damage to private property, Westpac bank’s economics unit has calculated that the fires will trim between 0.2-0.5% off growth in 2020 alone.
A burnt-out car is seen on property razed by bushfires in Bargo, southwest of Sydney, on December 21, 2019. Photo: AFP/Peter Parks
“That would put the cost in terms of insured and uninsured losses at around $5 billion,” the bank said in a report, noting that the total bill from disasters is generally about double the losses from insured claims.
AMP Capital earlier forecast economic losses amounting to 0.25-1% of gross domestic product (GDP), or a range of A$3-13 billion ($2-9 billion), which could give Australia zero or even negative growth this quarter.
To date the most damaging bushfires were a 2009 inferno that ripped through southeastern Victoria, costing the state A$4.4 billion ($3 billion).
Westpac noted that affected areas this time, mostly on the south coast of NSW and the same region of Victoria burned out a decade ago, account for only 1% of the economy. However, they are major producers of fruit and vegetables, beef, seafood, timber and wine. They are also big tourism areas.
The tourist industry lost at least A$1 billion ($675 million) during the crucial Christmas holiday period due to cancellations— 100% in many destinations — and there is no doubt more to come.
About 60% of bookings in areas unaffected by the bushfires were also scrapped due to adverse media coverage worldwide.
A kangaroo trying to move away from nearby bushfires at a residential property near the town of Nowra in the Australian state of New South Wales. Photo: AFP/Saeed Khan
“People have basically stopped travel,” Simon Westaway, executive director of the Australian Tourism Industry Council, told Reuters news agency. “And that’s absolutely understandable: human nature kicks in.”
Damage to telecommunications, power supplies, roads, bridges and other infrastructure is still being evaluated but will also account for millions of dollars, as will the loss of inventories and profits for thousands of small businesses.
Moody’s Analytics economist Katrina Ell said air pollution, which has affected 30% of the population, would result in reduced worker productivity, increased health spending, and lower crop yields. Moody’s, a ratings agency, has said the fires have been more destructive than the 2009 blazes.
Morrison’s conservative government, which staunchly backs fossil fuel use for power generation and rejects claims that climate change has aggravated the fires, was slow initially to respond to the disaster, though it has now offered more than A$2 billion ($1.3 billion) in emergency and reconstruction aid.
The prime minister left for a holiday to Hawaii as NSW was burning, returning only after a media outcry. He was then heckled by victims of the fires on the NSW south coast and criticized by state legislators in his own party.
A Newspoll survey, the first conducted since the worst fires began, found that 59% of respondents were dissatisfied with Morrison’s performance and only 37% satisfied. He now trails Labor’s Anthony Albanese by four percentage points, the survey showed.
Australia’s Prime Minister Scott Morrison visits a wildflower farm in an area devastated by bushfires in Sarsfield, Victoria state on January 3, 2020. Photo: AFP/James Ross/Pool
Labor, the main opposition party, leads the governing coalition 51% to 49% in two-party preferred terms two years out from the next election. That spread could widen depending on Morrison’s perceived performance in handling the fires’ aftermath.
Morrison contends that it is not his government’s job to fight fires, but conceded that he “could have handled on the ground much better.” Now he has agreed to call a royal commission — the highest level of official inquiry — into the government’s response, providing more fuel to his critics.
Even as the summer fires are quenched, Morrison will continue to feel the political heat. Indeed, there are already rumblings that he may face a leadership challenge among his own ranks in the months ahead
Fires, then floods: How much can a koala bear?
A veterinary surgeon offers gum leaves to a mother and joey koala rescued from bushfires. Other koalas have had to be rescued from floods. Photo: AFP/Paul Crock

Fires, then floods: How much can a koala bear?

Koalas which were under threat from bushfires last week have now had to be rescued from a flood
One week ago, koalas at an Australian wildlife park were in the path of raging bushfires. On Friday, they were soaking wet and being carried to safety from flash floods.
Months of drought that have contributed to Australia’s catastrophic bushfire season have this week given way to huge downpours in some of the blaze-ravaged areas.
At the Australian Reptile Park on the nation’s east coast near Sydney, heavy rains on Friday morning sent torrents of water through its bushland setting.
Images released by the park showed soaking wet koalas clinging to gum trees, and a zookeeper carrying two of the marsupials to safety through rushing waters.
Water levels in the lagoon for the park’s alligators also rose up close to the top of the fence.
A zookeeper is seen leaning over the fence and trying to push an alligator back down with a broom as it stretches up in an apparent bid to escape.
“This is incredible, just last week, we were having daily meetings to discuss the imminent threat of bushfires,” park director Tim Faulkner said.
“Today, we’ve had the whole team out there, drenched, acting fast to secure the safety of our animals and defend the park from the onslaught of water.
“We haven’t seen flooding like this at the park for over 15 years.”
The bushfires, which began in September, have claimed 28 lives and are estimated to have killed more than a billion animals across eastern and southern Australia.
The wet weather this week has given exhausted firefighters a huge boost, helping to reduce or contain some blazes.
But dozens of fires remain out of control, and authorities have warned the crisis could worsen again with Australia only halfway through its summer.
“The contrast between the current bushfire crisis and this sudden flooding is striking,” Faulkner said.
“But we are well aware that a huge part of Australia is still burning, and millions of animals are still under threat.”
– AFP