DiasporaStatements

Azerbaijan is unfit to join UNESCO’s Committee on Cultural Property Restitution

The Armenian Bar Association is appalled by the election of the Republic of Azerbaijan to the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Intergovernmental Committee for Promoting the Return of Cultural Property (ICPRCP). The decision is an alarming mismatch in light of: 

  1. Azerbaijan’s systematic and widespread destruction of Armenian cultural and religious property in and around Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh).
  2. Azerbaijan’s arrogant refusal to restore cultural property unlawfully appropriated from Armenians residing there.

Azerbaijan’s absurd promotion openly violates the spirit and obligations set forth in UNESCO’s own conventions and declarations, particularly the 1970 Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural Property and the 1954 Hague Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict and its Protocols. 

Numerous academic institutions, human rights organizations and independent media outlets have documented Azerbaijan’s systematic erasure, desecration and falsification of Armenian cultural heritage in Artsakh — including its demolition of thousands of Christian Armenian medieval-era khachkars (carved stone crosses) and monuments in Nakhichevan and its brazen destruction and appropriation of cultural sites across Artsakh. 

A nonpartisan investigation by Cornell University’s Caucasus Heritage Watch (CHW) found that Azerbaijan’s wreckage of Armenian heritage sites has been part of a deliberate, state-sponsored policy intended to wipe away all traces of the ethnic Armenian presence in these regions. Cornell’s researchers documented the sweeping and wholesale destruction of this uniquely Armenian cultural patrimony. A follow-up investigation by the ACLED (Armed Conflict Location & Event Data), an independent, impartial global conflict monitor, found that since 2021, Azerbaijan has destroyed nearly 80 ethnic Armenian historical, religious, political and residential sites in and around the enclave. 

In 2021, the International Court of Justice — the primary judicial body of the United Nations itself ordered Azerbaijan to take all necessary measures to prevent and punish acts of vandalism and desecration of Armenian cultural heritage in the overwhelmingly Armenian enclave, including but not limited to churches and other places of worship, monuments, landmarks, cemeteries and artifacts. To date, Azerbaijan has contemptuously ignored the court’s order. 

Furthermore, the Declaration of Dec. 11, 2020 by the Committee for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of Armed Conflict, responsible under the Hague Convention for protecting cultural heritage during armed conflict, explicitly recognized the documented damage to cultural property in and around Artsakh by Azeri forces, reaffirmed that such heritage “is a testimony of history inseparable from peoples’ identity,” and called for “all immediate and necessary measures to prevent looting and protect cultural property.” The Committee also 

welcomed UNESCO’s initiative to send an independent technical mission to assess the condition of cultural heritage in and around Artsakh — a mission that Azerbaijan has refused to permit. 

Azerbaijan’s participation in UNESCO’s cultural heritage committee will bring ridicule and ruin to UNESCO’s credibility and the universal principles it is meant to uphold. Azerbaijan’s mere presence disregards the very premise affirmed by the 1954 Hague Convention — that “damage to cultural property belonging to any people whatsoever means damage to the cultural heritage of all mankind.” 

The Armenian Bar Association calls upon UNESCO and its Member States to reconsider this impudent decision and recommit to transparency, accountability and the protection of cultural heritage without political bias. Upholding international law, ethical stewardship and the preservation of the world’s diverse cultural legacy must remain UNESCO’s guiding compass. 

Azerbaijan’s ICPRCP participation is a staggeringly low point in the great promise and protective reach of UNESCO and will, assuredly and unfortunately, offset UNESCO’s moral authority and erode worldwide trust in its mission.

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Guest Contributor

Guest contributions to the Armenian Weekly are informative articles or press releases written and submitted by members of the community.

One Comment

  1. Azerbaijan is unfit to be in any international organization which claims to uphold cultural heritage or human rights (which these organizations of course don’t uphold), be it UNESCO, the United Nations, the Council of Europe, etc. In an ideal just world, Azerbaijan should have been expelled from these organizations and heavily sanctioned for its gross human rights abuses, for the ethnic cleansing of all Armenians from Artsakh, for the wholescale destruction of Armenian heritage, and the chief instigator and war criminal Aliyev should have been charged by the International Criminal Court and hauled off to The Hague. But none of these things will happen, because in this unjust world, might trumps right.

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