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Experts say World
Heritage listing for Banteay Chmar will take years
But officials remain hopeful of winning the coveted
designation from UNESCO
The listing of Banteay Chmar temple as a UN World
Heritage Site will take at least two to three years, say
government officials and scholars who met at a
conference on the issue in Sisophon over the weekend.
Banteay Chmar is one of Cambodia's most neglected but
most spectacular temple sites. There is a concerted
effort to help the site win a coveted World Heritage
listing, but the process will not be easy, and there are
many hurdles to overcome, officials said.
Currently, not even the preliminary submission of an
application for a listing to the National Commission for
UNESCO in Phnom Penh has been completed.
"We are not ready to submit the application yet," said
Chuch Phoeurn, secretary of state at the Ministry of
Culture, who visited Banteay Chmar on Saturday with
provincial governor Oung Oeun and other dignitaries and
international experts.
More data still needs to be collected to establish that
Banteay Chmar possesses "outstanding universal values"
that make it a site of great historical and
architectural distinction.
Chuch Phoeurn said Banteay Chmar will be able to meet
the requirements because it is unique and its
architecture differs from the famous Bayon temple in the
Angkor complex.
Banteay Chmar is well known for its intricate carvings
and long walls of bas-relief. Vast and ruinous, it is
one of the few temples to feature the enigmatic
Bayon-style giant faces with their mysterious smiles.
It was built by King Jayavarman II on the site of an old
Hindu temple in the late 12th or early 13th century. In
its original state, a 9-kilometre-long wall enclosed the
temple, which was one of the largest Buddhist
monasteries of the Angkor era.
Most of the more than 100 scholars attending the
three-day Sisophon conference agreed that Banteay Chmar
has the credentials to be listed, but they concurred
that it is likely to be a long, slow process.
Governor Oung Oeun said: "I will be very happy if this
temple can be listed as a World Heritage Site, but
before we can achieve that goal a lot of work needs to
be done."
Once the initial submission is made and approved, it
must then go to the president of UNESCO to confirm, and
then it must receive the nod from Prime Minister Hun
Sen. Only then will it be submitted to UNESCO in Paris.
If Paris judges it to be a worthwhile bid, a team will
be sent to Banteay Chmar to verify the submission - and
if they tick it off and UNESCO approves, it will be
listed. "It is a long two- to three-year process," said
Chuch Phoeurn.
As well as these bureaucratic and cultural hurdles,
there are major infrastructure and access problems to
sort out, officials warned. The road leading to the site
is in poor condition and is often washed out in the
rainy season.
John Sandey, Asia Pacific field director of the Global
Heritage Fund, which is helping Cambodia restore the
temple, said at the conference:
"There are major deficiencies like a lack of water and
electricity at the site that must receive attention. No
water, no tourists." And no World Heritage listing - for
the moment.
Sourced = The Phnom Penh Post
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