Ghanaians must be more interested in our heritage sites – GMMB official
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symbolism, silence, sacrifice and dead soldiers
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23 Apr in 23:52 EU Today
April 18th is widely celebrated as the International Day for Monuments and Sites every year. Established by the International Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) and adopted by the 22nd UNESCO General Conference in 1983, the day aims at increasing inclusion and diversity while conserving monuments, ancestral sites and indigenous domains in line with the Venice Charter.
As
EU Today writes, on March 30th, the International Criminal Court awarded a symbolic €1 to Mali and UNESCO for the damage suffered by the Malian people as a result of the destruction of Timbuktu’s cultural heritage in 2012. The Hague-based Court had sentenced a Malian jihadist for the destruction of the UNESCO-listed site back in 2016 in a historic decision, which condemned attacking a nation’s historic and cultural heritage as a war crime for the first time.
In Bosnia, there are more than 2,100 Monuments devoted to Civilians and Fighters killed during War April 20, 2021 6:00 PM by Y.Z
The International Day for Monuments and Sites (World Heritage Day) is held on 18 April each year around the world with different types of activities, including visits to monuments and heritage sites, conferences, round tables and newspaper articles. It was proposed by the International Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) and approved by the General Assembly of UNESCO.
The Association for Social Research and Communication (UDIK) is the creator of the Central Register of Monuments (CES) which includes data on monuments devoted to the 1990s war in the territory of the former Yugoslavia. Within this database, there are over 3,500 monuments mapped in Bosnia and Herzegovina, Montenegro, Croatia and Serbia (without Kosovo).