The country’s culture ministry organised the two-day event with UNESCO on the 50th anniversary of the World Heritage Convention’s adoption in 1972.
In an announcement, UNESCO stated that the aim of the conference is “…to present critical factors of our times that affect cultural and natural monuments worldwide, and the potential of the World Heritage Convention to contribute to their identification and mitigation,” as well as to focus on climate change and sustainable tourism.
Mitsotakis inaugurated the conference in the presence of UNESCO Director-General Audrey Azouley.
The conference comes in the wake of a growing instrumentalization of world heritage monuments for political expediencies.
The most egregious example is the Erdogan regime’s July 2020 reconversion of the Hagia Sophia of Constantinople from a museum into a mosque.
UNESCO has pledged to send experts to inspect the greatest of all basilicas of eastern Christendom to determine whether the incomparable monument will be declared in a threatened state.
Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis attended and spoke at the international conference “The Next 50: The Future of World Heritage in Challenging Times, Enhancing Resilience and Sustainability”, organized in Delphi by the Ministry of Culture and Sports in collaboration with UNESCO, on the occasion of the 50 years from the signing of the Convention on the World Cultural and Natural Heritage.