UN, Arab officials seek to counter jihadist threat to monuments

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UN and Arab officials Wednesday called for global efforts to combat the "unprecedented" destruction of heritage sites in the Middle East, accusing jihadist groups of selling stolen antiquities to fund their wars.

At the start of a two-day conference seeking ways to combat destruction of heritage sites, officials also called for better monitoring of the global trade in antiquities in order to prevent smuggling of stolen artefacts.

The Cairo conference follows an international outcry after the jihadist Islamic State group circulated a video last month showing its militants bulldozing the ancient Assyrian city of Nimrud in northern Iraq.

"The looting of archaeological sites has reached an unprecedented scale," Irina Bokova, the head of UN cultural agency UNESCO, said at the opening session of the conference at a Cairo hotel.

"This cultural cleansing is being used as a tactic to terrify people... it is a war crime."

Egypt's Antiquities Minister Mamdouh Damaty also warned that heritage sites in the region were under threat.

"The region is suffering from this challenge of direct and indirect destruction of antiquities and human heritage," Damaty said.

"There are attempts to demolish the human heritage of the region.... be it in Iraq, Libya, Yemen or in Egypt."

Foreign affairs and antiquities officials from 11 Arab countries including Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Libya, Kuwait and Sudan were among those attending the conference.

The meeting is an effort to "fight against those who are taking away from us our common history," said Deborah Lehr, the chairwoman of the Antiquities Coalition, a non-governmental group formed to fight the destruction of heritage sites.

"The world is appalled" at the destruction, she told the conference, adding that the meeting aims "to unite efforts to seek solutions to this threat".

IS, which has captured territory in Iraq and Syria, has claimed the destruction of numerous artefacts in the region, especially in Iraq.

- Antiquities trade surging -

Iraqi Minister of Tourism and Antiquities Adel Fadh al-Shirshab, who attended the conference, said IS has "looted... and stolen antiquities" to fund its war in the country.

"We must cut their source of income and antiquities is one such source," Shirshab told reporters on the sidelines of the conference.

The IS-circulated video of Nimrud's destruction showed the group's militants using sledgehammers and power tools to break artefacts before rigging the site with explosives.

Subsequent footage showed a massive explosion and its aftermath, suggesting the ruins of Nimrud -- which lie on the Tigris about 30 kilometres (18 miles) southeast of the city of Mosul -- were largely destroyed.

Nimrud, founded in the 13th century BC, is one of the most famous archaeological sites in Iraq, a country often described as the cradle of civilisation.

Bokova had on Tuesday condemned "severe damage" to heritage sites in Yemen -- including the old city of the capital Sanaa -- amid a Saudi-led air war against Shiite rebels, but made no mention of the campaign in her remarks at the conference.

In a separate function at Cairo's Al-Azhar university later Wednesday, she reiterated her call to protect ancient monuments.

"Can we imagine Egypt without the pyramids, the Valley of Kings or Queens, without Old Cairo, without Karnak?" Bokova said.

"I don't think we can imagine at all."

Lehr told AFP that the global trade in artefacts required tougher monitoring.

"Only in the United States over the past two years, legal imports of antiquities have risen by 1,000 percent... imagine what illicit trade must be," she said.