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Director General Matsura, Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen, It is an honor to address you this afternoon. Let me begin by thanking our esteemed Director General for having presented the reports to us, and to express my gratitude to all who took a hand in their preparation. I would like particularly to commend documents 179 EX/4 and 179/EX/5. They clearly summarize the activities that took place over the course of the 2006-2007 biennale, in line with our short- and medium-term strategies. We support the Organization’s structural reforms, as well as an increase in cross-sector cooperation. And the We also support the new strategy for strengthening scientific capacities at the national and regional level. I underline the importance of the International Basic Sciences Programme framework that has enabled us to successfully cooperate with both the UNESCO Secretariat and its Regional Office in I underline my country’s close cooperation with UNESCO in the field of sustainable water programs. I recall that the International Research and I am honored to confirm that UNESCO will sponsor an international conference entitled “Climate Change on the Eve of the Second Decade of the Twenty-First Century”, in May 2009. It will be hosted by the I am also honored to highlight the leading role of the Ladies and Gentlemen, The The greatest challenge to human rights in More than 150 churches or monasteries, at last count, including dozens that were build as long ago as the 14th century, have been set ablaze by Kosovo Albanian extremists in the past eight years, including 35 during the March 2004 pogrom against Serbs in Kosovo. Hundreds of other holy sites remain at risk, something that has been recognized by UNESCO and its Centre for World Heritage. All four of our World Heritage designated sites that are located in our I would also like to recognize the personal engagement of Director General Matsura, and to particularly thank ____ In conclusion, I want to underline the precise nature of the fight to preserve Serbian heritage in Kosovo—and to underscore its universality—in the context of the danger posed by the unilateral, illegal and illegitimate declaration of independence by the Kosovo Albanians on February 17th. The purposeful attempt to vandalize, loot, burn, desecrate, and destroy what others have built long ago, in the conviction that such deeds will contribute to the invention of an historical narrative of one’s own, must be condemned in the strongest possible terms, and identified clearly for what they are: zealous, fevered, revolting acts of cultural cleansing. Such is reality in Kosovo today—a dark, ugly reality that stains the fabric of democratic achievements in the Western Balkans. No peoples can afford to build a common future on the ashes of a vanished bequest. To protect and enhance the cultural achievements of humankind is a great task before us all. For our heritage constitutes a foundation of identity, a basis of development, a tool of reconciliation, and an instrument of peace. Thank you very much for your attention. |