The UNESCO World Heritage Committee made a decision to leave Kyiv Cave Monastery (Kyiv Pechersk Lavra) and the National Sanctuary “Sophia of Kyiv” on the World Heritage List. The Committee’s session is taking place in South Africa and will last till June 27.
In the middle of April this year, an expert commission from this organization visited Ukraine to monitor the situation with buffer zones around the national reserves “Sophia of Kyiv” and Kyiv Cave Monastery. It has been the third visit since 2010. That is why Kyiv officials started to worry: according to Dmytro Nikulshyn, head of the Kyiv City Council standing commission for culture and tourism, there was a real threat of exclusion of “Sophia of Kyiv” and Lavra from the UNESCO World Heritage List. The Day wrote that since the UNESCO Paris Conference in 2010, Kyiv had received a lot of signals to stop decreasing the buffer zone around the monuments and freeze any construction projects there, but Kyiv authorities would not react. First UNESCO representatives only proposed their observations and recommendations for Ukraine, but this time a report was sent to the 2013 UNESCO conference in South Africa.
And now the regular sitting of the Committee on World Heritage ended with a positive decision. “I would like to congratulate you and the Ukrainian community on the fact that this issue has been solved today and will never be raised again,” said minister of culture Leonid Novokhatko. He also noted that representatives of Germany and Switzerland criticized Ukraine during the voting at the committee’s session. But we were supported by Russia, Japan, Algeria, and other countries. Novokhatko emphasized that during the previous sessions of UNESCO, the matter of exclusion of Ukrainian cultural heritage monuments was never raised, and after this voting it was finally removed from the agenda.
Meanwhile the members of the Ukrainian delegation, including Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Ukraine to the Socialist Republic of Vietnam and the Kingdom of Cambodia Oleksii Shovkoplias, Kyiv chief architect Serhii Tselovalnyk, and director general of the National Preserve of Tauric Chersonesus Serhii Zhunko, expect positive results in the voting on the possibility of including such Ukrainian monuments as “The Ancient City of Tauric Chersonesus and its Chora (5th century BC – 14th century AD)” and “Wooden Churches of the Carpathian Region of Ukraine and Poland” to the World Heritage List. The World Heritage Committee might consider this issue as well.