Updated: Sunday January 12, 2014/AlAhad
Rabi' Awwal 11, 1435/Ravivara
Pausa 22, 1935, at 12:53:57 PM
The Convention for the Protection of the
World Cultural and Natural Heritage
The General Conference of the United
Nations Education, Scientific and Cultural Organization meeting in Paris from
17 October to 21 November 1972, at its seventeenth session,
Noting that the cultural heritage and
the natural heritage are increasingly threatened with destruction not only by
the traditional causes of decay, but also by changing social and economic
conditions which aggravate the situation with even more formidable phenomena of
damage or destruction,
Considering that deterioration or
disappearance of any item of the cultural or natural heritage constitutes a
harmful impoverishment of the heritage of all the nations of the world,
Considering that protection of this
heritage at the national level often remains incomplete because of the scale of
the resources which it requires and of the insufficient economic, scientific,
and technological resources of the country where the property to be protected
is situated,
Recalling that the Constitution of the
Organization provides that it will maintain, increase, and diffuse knowledge by
assuring the conservation and protection of the world's heritage, and
recommending to the nations concerned the necessary international conventions,
Considering that the existing
international conventions, recommendations and resolutions concerning cultural
and natural property demonstrate the importance, for all the peoples of the
world, of safeguarding this unique and irreplaceable property, to whatever
people it may belong,
Considering that parts of the cultural
or natural heritage are of outstanding interest and therefore need to be
preserved as part of the world heritage of mankind as a whole,
Considering that in view of the
magnitude and gravity of the new dangers threatening them, it is incumbent on
the international community as a whole to participate in the protection of the
cultural and natural heritage of outstanding universal value, by the granting
of collective assistance which, although not taking the place of action by the
State concerned, will serve as an efficient complement thereto,
Considering that it is essential for
this purpose to adopt new provisions in the form of a convention establishing
an effective system of collective protection of the cultural and natural
heritage of outstanding universal value, organized on a permanent basis and in
accordance with modern scientific methods,
Having decided, at its sixteenth
session, that this question should be made the subject of an international
convention,
Adopts this sixteenth day of November 1972 this Convention.
I. DEFINITION OF THE CULTURAL AND
NATURAL HERITAGE
Article 1 For the purpose of this Convention, the
following shall be considered as
'cultural heritage': monuments: architectural works, works of monumental
sculpture and painting, elements or structures of an archeological nature,
inscriptions, cave dwellings and combinations of features, which are of
outstanding universal value from the point of view of history, art or science;
groups of buildings: groups of separate
or connected buildings which, because of their architecture, their homogeneity
or their place in the landscape, are of outstanding universal value from the
point of view of history, art or science;
sites works of man or the combined works
of nature and man, and areas including archaeological sites which are of
outstanding universal value from the historical, aesthetic, ethnological or
anthropological point of view.
Article 2 For the purposes of this Convention, the
following shall be considered as 'natural heritage':
natural features consisting of physical
and biological formations or groups of such formations, which are of
outstanding universal value from the aesthetic or scientific point of view;
geological and physiographical
formations and precisely delineated areas which constitute the habitat of
threatened species of animals and plants of outstanding universal value from
the point of view of science or conservation;
natural sites or precisely delineated natural areas of outstanding universal
value from the point of view of science, conservation or natural beauty.
Article 3 It is for each State Party to this
Convention to identify and delineate the different properties situated on its
territory mentioned in Articles 1 and 2 above.
II. NATIONAL PROTECTION AND INTERNATIONAL
PROTECTION OF THE CULTURAL AND NATURAL HERITAGE
Article 4 Each State Party to this Convention
recognizes that the duty of ensuring the identification, protection,
conservation, presentation and transmission to future generations of the
cultural and natural heritage referred to in Articles 1 and 2 and situated on
its territory, belongs primarily to that State. It will do all it can to this
end, to the utmost of its own resources and, where appropriate, with any
international assistance and co- operation, in particular, financial, artistic,
scientific and technical, which it may be able to obtain.
Article 5 To ensure that effective and active
measures are taken for the protection, conservation and presentation of the
cultural and natural heritage situated on its territory, each State Party to
this Convention shall endeavor, in so far as possible, and as appropriate for
each country:
(a) to adopt a general policy which aims
to give the cultural and natural heritage a function in the life of the
community and to integrate the protection of that heritage into comprehensive
planning programmes;
(b) to set up within its territories,
where such services do not exist, one or more services for the protection,
conservation and presentation of the cultural and natural heritage with an
appropriate staff and possessing the means to discharge their functions;
(c) to develop scientific and technical
studies and research and to work out such operating methods as will make the
State capable of counteracting the dangers that threaten its cultural or
natural heritage;
(d) to take the appropriate legal,
scientific, technical, administrative and financial measures necessary for the
identification, protection, conservation, presentation and rehabilitation of
this heritage; and
(e) to foster the establishment or
development of national or regional centres for training in the protection,
conservation and presentation of the cultural and natural heritage and to
encourage scientific research in this field.
Article 6 1. Whilst fully respecting the
sovereignty of the States on whose territory the cultural and natural heritage
mentioned in Articles 1 and 2 is situated, and without prejudice to property
right provided by national legislation, the States Parties to this Convention
recognize that such heritage constitutes a world heritage for whose protection
it is the duty of the international community as a whole to co-operate.
2. The States Parties undertake, in
accordance with the provisions of this Convention, to give their help in the
identification, protection, conservation and presentation of the cultural and
natural heritage referred to in paragraphs 2 and 4 of Article 11 if the States
on whose territory it is situated so request.
3. Each State Party to this Convention
undertakes not to take any deliberate measures which might damage directly or
indirectly the cultural and natural heritage referred to in Articles 1 and 2
situated on the territory of other States Parties to this Convention.
Article 7 For the purpose of this Convention,
international protection of the world cultural and natural heritage shall be
understood to mean the establishment of a system of international co-operation
and assistance designed to support States Parties to the Convention in their
efforts to conserve and identify that heritage.
III. INTERGOVERNMENTAL COMMITTEE FOR THE
PROTECTION OF THE WORLD CULTURAL AND NATURAL HERITAGE
Article 8
1. An Intergovernmental Committee for
the Protection of the Cultural and Natural Heritage of Outstanding Universal
Value, called 'the World Heritage Committee', is hereby established within the
United Nations Education, Scientific and Cultural Organization. It shall be
composed of 15 States Parties to the Convention, elected by States Parties to
the Convention meeting in general assembly during the ordinary session of the
General Conference of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization. The number of States members of the Committee shall be increased
to 21 as from the date of the ordinary session of the General Conference
following the entry into force of this Convention for at least 40 States.
2. Election of members of the Committee
shall ensure an equitable representation of the different regions and cultures
of the world.
3. A representative of the International
Centre for the Study of the Preservation and Restoration of Cultural Property
(Rome Centre), a representative of the International Council of Monuments and
Sites (ICOMOS) and a representative of the International Union for Conservation
of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN), to whom may be added, at the request of
States Parties to the Convention meeting in general assembly during the
ordinary sessions of the General Conference of the United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization, representatives of other
intergovernmental or non-governmental organizations, with similar objectives,
may attend the meetings of the Committee in an advisory capacity.
Article 9
1. The term of office of States members
of the World Heritage Committee shall extend from the end of the ordinary
session of the General Conference during which they are elected until the end
of its third subsequent ordinary session.
2. The term of office of one-third of
the members designated at the time of the first election shall, however, cease
at the end of the first ordinary session of the General Conference following
that at which they were elected; and the term of office of a further third of
the members designated at the same time shall cease at the end of the second
ordinary session of the General Conference following that at which they were
elected. The names of these members shall be chosen by lot by the President of
the General Conference of the United Nations Education, Scientific and Cultural
Organization after the first election.
3. States members of the Committee shall choose as their
representatives persons qualified in the field of the cultural or natural
heritage.
Article 10
1. The World Heritage Committee shall
adopt its Rules of Procedure.
2. The Committee may at any time invite
public or private organizations or individuals to participate in its meetings
for consultation on particular problems.
3. The Committee may create such
consultative bodies as it deems necessary for the performance of its functions.
Article 11
1. Every State Party to this Convention
shall, in so far as possible, submit to the World Heritage Committee an
inventory of property forming part of the cultural and natural heritage,
situated in its territory and suitable for inclusion in the list provided for
in paragraph 2 of this Article. This inventory, which shall not be considered
exhaustive, shall include documentation about the location of the property in
question and its significance.
2. On the basis of the inventories
submitted by States in accordance with paragraph 1, the Committee shall
establish, keep up to date and publish, under the title of 'World Heritage
List,' a list of properties forming part of the cultural heritage and natural
heritage, as defined in Articles 1 and 2 of this Convention, which it considers
as having outstanding universal value in terms of such criteria as it shall
have established. An updated list shall be distributed at least every two
years.
3. The inclusion of a property in the
World Heritage List requires the consent of the State concerned. The inclusion
of a property situated in a territory, sovereignty or jurisdiction over which
is claimed by more than one State shall in no way prejudice the rights of the
parties to the dispute.
4. The Committee shall establish, keep
up to date and publish, whenever circumstances shall so require, under the
title of 'list of World Heritage in Danger', a list of the property appearing
in the World Heritage List for the conservation of which major operations are
necessary and for which assistance has been requested under this Convention.
This list shall contain an estimate of the cost of such operations. The list
may include only such property forming part of the cultural and natural
heritage as is threatened by serious and specific dangers, such as the threat
of disappearance caused by accelerated deterioration, large-scale public or
private projects or rapid urban or tourist development projects; destruction
caused by changes in the use or ownership of the land; major alterations due to
unknown causes; abandonment for any reason whatsoever; the outbreak or the
threat of an armed conflict; calamities and cataclysms; serious fires,
earthquakes, landslides; volcanic eruptions; changes in water level, floods and
tidal waves. The Committee may at any time, in case of urgent need, make a new
entry in the List of World Heritage in Danger and publicize such entry
immediately.
5. The Committee shall define the
criteria on the basis of which a property belonging to the cultural or natural
heritage may be included in either of the lists mentioned in paragraphs 2 and 4
of this article.
6. Before refusing a request for
inclusion in one of the two lists mentioned in paragraphs 2 and 4 of this
article, the Committee shall consult the State Party in whose territory the
cultural or natural property in question is situated.
7. The Committee shall, with the
agreement of the States concerned, co- ordinate and encourage the studies and
research needed for the drawing up of the lists referred to in paragraphs 2 and
4 of this article.
Article 12 The fact that a property belonging to
the cultural or natural heritage has not been included in either of the two
lists mentioned in paragraphs 2 and 4 of Article 11 shall in no way be
construed to mean that it does not have an outstanding universal value for
purposes other than those resulting from inclusion in these lists.
Article 13
1. The World Heritage Committee shall
receive and study requests for international assistance formulated by States
Parties to this Convention with respect to property forming part of the
cultural or natural heritage, situated in their territories, and included or
potentially suitable for inclusion in the lists mentioned referred to in
paragraphs 2 and 4 of Article 11. The purpose of such requests may be to secure
the protection, conservation, presentation or rehabilitation of such property.
2. Requests for international assistance
under paragraph 1 of this article may also be concerned with identification of
cultural or natural property defined in Articles 1 and 2, when preliminary
investigations have shown that further inquiries would be justified.
3. The Committee shall decide on the
action to be taken with regard to these requests, determine where appropriate,
the nature and extent of its assistance, and authorize the conclusion, on its
behalf, of the necessary arrangements with the government concerned.
4. The Committee shall determine an
order of priorities for its operations. It shall in so doing bear in mind the
respective importance for the world cultural and natural heritage of the
property requiring protection, the need to give international assistance to the
property most representative of a natural environment or of the genius and the
history of the peoples of the world, the urgency of the work to be done, the resources
available to the States on whose territory the threatened property is situated
and in particular the extent to which they are able to safeguard such property
by their own means.
5. The Committee shall draw up, keep up
to date and publicize a list of property for which international assistance has
been granted.
6. The Committee shall decide on the use
of the resources of the Fund established under Article 15 of this Convention.
It shall seek ways of increasing these resources and shall take all useful
steps to this end.
7. The Committee shall co-operate with
international and national governmental and non-governmental organizations
having objectives similar to those of this Convention. For the implementation
of its programmes and projects, the Committee may call on such organizations,
particularly the International Centre for the Study of the Preservation and
Restoration of Cultural Property (the Rome Centre), the International Council
of Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) and the International Union for Conservation of
Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN), as well as on public and private bodies
and individuals.
8. Decisions of the Committee shall be
taken by a majority of two-thirds of its members present and voting. A majority
of the members of the Committee shall constitute a quorum.
Article 14
1. The World Heritage Committee shall be
assisted by a Secretariat appointed by the Director-General of the United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization.
2. The Director-General of the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, utilizing to the fullest
extent possible the services of the International Centre for the Study of the
Preservation and the Restoration of Cultural Property (the Rome Centre), the
International Council of Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) and the International
Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN) in their
respective areas of competence and capability, shall prepare the Committee's
documentation and the agenda of its meetings and shall have the responsibility
for the implementation of its decisions.
IV. FUND FOR THE PROTECTION OF THE WORLD
CULTURAL AND NATURAL HERITAGE
Article 15
1. A Fund for the Protection of the
World Cultural and Natural Heritage of Outstanding Universal Value, called 'the
World Heritage Fund', is hereby established.
2. The Fund shall constitute a trust
fund, in conformity with the provisions of the Financial Regulations of the
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization.
3. The resources of the Fund shall
consist of:
(a) compulsory and voluntary
contributions made by States Parties to this Convention,
(b) Contributions, gifts or bequests
which may be made by:
(i) other States;
(ii) the United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization, other organizations of the United Nations
system, particularly the United Nations Development Programme or other
intergovernmental organizations;
(iii) public or private bodies or individuals;
(c) any interest due on the resources of
the Fund;
(d) funds raised by collections and
receipts from events organized for the benefit of the fund; and
(e) all other resources authorized by
the Fund's regulations, as drawn up by the World Heritage Committee.
4. Contributions to the Fund and other
forms of assistance made available to the Committee may be used only for such
purposes as the Committee shall define. The Committee may accept contributions
to be used only for a certain programme or project, provided that the Committee
shall have decided on the implementation of such programme or project. No
political conditions may be attached to contributions made to the Fund.
Article 16
1. Without prejudice to any supplementary voluntary
contribution, the States Parties to this Convention undertake to pay regularly,
every two years, to the World Heritage Fund, contributions, the amount of
which, in the form of a uniform percentage applicable to all States, shall be
determined by the General Assembly of States Parties to the Convention, meeting
during the sessions of the General Conference of the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. This decision of the General
Assembly requires the majority of the States Parties present and voting, which
have not made the declaration referred to in paragraph 2 of this Article. In no
case shall the compulsory contribution of States Parties to the Convention
exceed 1% of the contribution to the regular budget of the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization.
2. However, each State referred to in
Article 31 or in Article 32 of this Convention may declare, at the time of the
deposit of its instrument of ratification, acceptance or accession, that it
shall not be bound by the provisions of paragraph 1 of this Article.
3. A State Party to the Convention which
has made the declaration referred to in paragraph 2 of this Article may at any
time withdraw the said declaration by notifying the Director-General of the
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. However, the
withdrawal of the declaration shall not take effect in regard to the compulsory
contribution due by the State until the date of the subsequent General Assembly
of States parties to the Convention.
4. In order that the Committee may be
able to plan its operations effectively, the contributions of States Parties to
this Convention which have made the declaration referred to in paragraph 2 of
this Article, shall be paid on a regular basis, at least every two years, and
should not be less than the contributions which they should have paid if they
had been bound by the provisions of paragraph 1 of this Article.
5. Any State Party to the Convention
which is in arrears with the payment of its compulsory or voluntary
contribution for the current year and the calendar year immediately preceding
it shall not be eligible as a Member of the World Heritage Committee, although
this provision shall not apply to the first election.
The terms of office of any such State
which is already a member of the Committee shall terminate at the time of the
elections provided for in Article 8, paragraph 1 of this Convention.
Article 17 The States Parties to this Convention
shall consider or encourage the establishment of national public and private
foundations or associations whose purpose is to invite donations for the
protection of the cultural and natural heritage as defined in Articles 1 and 2
of this Convention.
Article 18 The States Parties to this Convention
shall give their assistance to international fund-raising campaigns organized
for the World Heritage Fund under the auspices of the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization. They shall facilitate
collections made by the bodies mentioned in paragraph 3 of Article 15 for this
purpose.
V. CONDITIONS AND ARRANGEMENTS FOR
INTERNATIONAL ASSISTANCE
Article 19 Any State Party to this Convention may
request international assistance for property forming part of the cultural or
natural heritage of outstanding universal value situated within its territory.
It shall submit with its request such information and documentation provided
for in Article 21 as it has in its possession and as will enable the Committee
to come to a decision.
Article 20 Subject to the provisions of paragraph
2 of Article 13, sub-paragraph (c) of Article 22 and Article 23, international
assistance provided for by this Convention may be granted only to property
forming part of the cultural and natural heritage which the World Heritage Committee
has decided, or may decide, to enter in one of the lists mentioned in
paragraphs 2 and 4 of Article 11.
Article 21 1. The World Heritage Committee shall
define the procedure by which requests to it for international assistance shall
be considered and shall specify the content of the request, which should define
the operation contemplated, the work that is necessary, the expected cost
thereof, the degree of urgency and the reasons why the resources of the State
requesting assistance do not allow it to meet all the expenses. Such requests
must be supported by experts' reports whenever possible.
2. Requests based upon disasters or
natural calamities should, by reasons of the urgent work which they may
involve, be given immediate, priority consideration by the Committee, which
should have a reserve fund at its disposal against such contingencies.
3. Before coming to a decision, the
Committee shall carry out such studies and consultations as it deems necessary.
Article 22 Assistance granted by the
World Heritage Fund may take the following forms:
(a) studies concerning the artistic,
scientific and technical problems raised by the protection, conservation,
presentation and rehabilitation of the cultural and natural heritage, as
defined in paragraphs 2 and 4 of Article 11 of this Convention;
(b) provisions of experts, technicians
and skilled labour to ensure that the approved work is correctly carried out;
(c) training of staff and specialists at
all levels in the field of identification, protection, conservation,
presentation and rehabilitation of the cultural and natural heritage;
(d) supply of equipment which the State
concerned does not possess or is not in a position to acquire;
(e) low-interest or interest-free loans
which might be repayable on a long-term basis;
(f) the granting, in exceptional cases
and for special reasons, of non-repayable subsidies.
Article 23 The World Heritage Committee may also
provide international assistance to national or regional centres for the
training of staff and specialists at all levels in the field of identification,
protection, conservation, presentation and rehabilitation of the cultural and
natural heritage.
Article 24 International assistance on a large
scale shall be preceded by detailed scientific, economic and technical studies.
These studies shall draw upon the most advanced techniques for the protection,
conservation, presentation and rehabilitation of the natural and cultural
heritage and shall be consistent with the objectives of this Convention. The
studies shall also seek means of making rational use of the resources available
in the State concerned.
Article 25 As a general rule, only part of the
cost of work necessary shall be borne by the international community. The
contribution of the State benefiting from international assistance shall
constitute a substantial share of the resources devoted to each programme or
project, unless its resources do not permit this.
Article 26 The World Heritage Committee and the
recipient State shall define in the agreement they conclude the conditions in
which a programme or project for which international assistance under the terms
of this Convention is provided, shall be carried out. It shall be the
responsibility of the State receiving such international assistance to continue
to protect, conserve and present the property so safeguarded, in observance of
the conditions laid down by the agreement.
VI. EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMMES
Article 27
1. The States Parties to this Convention
shall endeavor by all appropriate means, and in particular by educational and
information programmes, to strengthen appreciation and respect by their peoples
of the cultural and natural heritage defined in Articles 1 and 2 of the
Convention.
2. They shall undertake to keep the
public broadly informed of the dangers threatening this heritage and of the
activities carried on in pursuance of this Convention.
Article 28 States Parties to this Convention which
receive international assistance under the Convention shall take appropriate
measures to make known the importance of the property for which assistance has
been received and the role played by such assistance.
VII. REPORTS
Article 29
1. The States Parties to this Convention
shall, in the reports which they submit to the General Conference of the United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization on dates and in a
manner to be determined by it, give information on the legislative and
administrative provisions which they have adopted and other action which they
have taken for the application of this Convention, together with details of the
experience acquired in this field.
2. These reports shall be brought to the
attention of the World Heritage Committee.
3. The Committee shall submit a report
on its activities at each of the ordinary sessions of the General Conference of
the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization.
VIII. FINAL CLAUSES
Article 30 This Convention is drawn up in Arabic,
English, French, Russian and Spanish, the five texts being equally
authoritative.
Article 31
1. This Convention shall be subject to
ratification or acceptance by States members of the United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization in accordance with their respective
constitutional procedures.
2. The instruments of ratification or
acceptance shall be deposited with the Director-General of the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization.
Article 32
1. This Convention shall be open to
accession by all States not members of the United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization which are invited by the General
Conference of the Organization to accede to it.
2. Accession shall be effected by the deposit
of an instrument of accession with the Director-General of the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization.
Article 33 This Convention shall enter into force
three months after the date of the deposit of the twentieth instrument of
ratification, acceptance or accession, but only with respect to those States
which have deposited their respective instruments of ratification, acceptance
or accession on or before that date. It shall enter into force with respect to
any other State three months after the deposit of its instrument of
ratification, acceptance or accession.
Article 34 The following provisions shall apply to
those States Parties to this Convention which have a federal or non-unitary
constitutional system:
(a) with regard to the provisions of
this Convention, the implementation of which comes under the legal jurisdiction
of the federal or central legislative power, the obligations of the federal or
central government shall be the same as for those States parties which are not
federal States;
(b) with regard to the provisions of
this Convention, the implementation of which comes under the legal jurisdiction
of individual constituent States, countries, provinces or cantons that are not
obliged by the constitutional system of the federation to take legislative
measures, the federal government shall inform the competent authorities of such
States, countries, provinces or cantons of the said provisions, with its
recommendation for their adoption.
Article 35
1.
Each State Party to this Convention may denounce
the Convention.
2.
The denunciation shall be notified by an instrument
in writing, deposited with the Director-General of the United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization.
3.
The denunciation shall take effect twelve months
after the receipt of the instrument of denunciation. It shall not affect the
financial obligations of the denouncing State until the date on which the
withdrawal takes effect.
Article 36 The Director-General of
the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization shall
inform the States members of the Organization, the States not members of the
Organization which are referred to in Article 32, as well as the United
Nations, of the deposit of all the instruments of ratification, acceptance, or
accession provided for in Articles 31 and 32, and of the denunciations provided
for in Article 35.
Article 37 1. This Convention may be
revised by the General Conference of the United Nations Educational, Scientific
and Cultural Organization. Any such revision shall, however, bind only the
States which shall become Parties to the revising convention.
2. If the General
Conference should adopt a new convention revising this Convention in whole or
in part, then, unless the new convention otherwise provides, this Convention
shall cease to be open to ratification, acceptance or accession, as from the
date on which the new revising convention enters into force.
Article 38 In conformity with Article
102 of the Charter of the United Nations, this Convention shall be registered
with the Secretariat of the United Nations at the request of the
Director-General of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization.
Done in Paris, this
twenty-third day of November 1972, in two authentic copies bearing the
signature of the President of the seventeenth session of the General Conference
and of the Director-General of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization, which shall be deposited in the archives of the United
Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization, and certified true
copies of which shall be delivered to all the States referred to in Articles 31
and 32 as well as to the United Nations.
Reproduced from UNESCO
Document 17/C/106 of November 15, 1972.The Convention was adopted by the
Seventeenth Session of the UNESCO General Conference (October 17-November 18,
1972) by a vote of 75-1, with 17 abstentions. The Report of the Special
Committee of Government Experts on the Convention is contained in UNESCO
Document 17/C/18 of June 15, 1972.
As of November 1992, the
Convention had been ratified by 129 nations: Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria,
Angola, Antigua & Barbuda, Argentina, Australia, Bahrain, Bangladesh,
Belarus, Belize, Benin, Bolivia, Brazil, Bulgaria, Burkina Faso, Burundi,
Cambodia, Cameroon, Canada, Cape Verde, Central African Republic, Chile, China,
Columbia, Congo, Costa Rica, Croatia, Cuba, Cyprus, Czech and Slovak Federal
Republic, Denmark, Dominican Republic, Ecudaor, Egypt, El Salvador, Ethiopia,
Fiji, Finland, France, Gabon, Gambia, Germany, Ghana, Greece, Guatemala,
Guinea, Guyana, Haiti, Holy See, Honduras, Hungary, India, Indonesia, Iran,
Iraq, Ireland, Italy, Ivory Coast, Jamaica, Japan, Jordan, Kenya, Korea
(South), Laos, Lebanon, Libya, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Madagascar, Malawi,
Malaysia, Maldives, Mali, Malta, Mauritania, Mexico, Monaco, Mongolia, Morocco,
Mozambique, New Zealand, Nepal, Netherlands, Nicaragua, Niger, Nigeria, Norway,
Oman, Pakistan, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Phillipines, Poland, Portugal, Qatar,
Romania, Russian Federation, Saint Christopher & Nevis, Saint Lucia, San
Marino, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Seychelles, Solomon Islands, Spain, Sri Lanka,
Sudan, Sweden, Switzerland, Syria, Tadjikistan, Tanzania, Thailand, Tunisia,
Turkey, Uganda, Ukraine, United Kingdom, United States, Uruguay, Venezuela,
Vietnam, Yemen, Yugoslavia, Zaire, Zambia, Zimbabwe.
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