The Western Ghats has made it to the coveted list of 
World Heritage Sites. The World Heritage Committee, meeting at St. 
Petersburg in Russia, decided to inscribe 39 serial sites of the Western
 Ghats on the World Heritage List on July 01.
“The
 Western Ghats was inscribed under criteria 9 and 10 of the Operational 
Guidelines of the World Heritage Convention,” Vinod B. Mathur, Dean of 
the Wildlife Institute of India, told.
Criterion
 nine of the guidelines deals with properties which are “outstanding 
examples representing significant ongoing ecological and biological 
processes in the evolution and development of terrestrial, freshwater, 
coastal and marine ecosystems and communities of plants and animals.” 
Criterion 10 is relevant for “those properties which contain the most 
important and significant natural habitats for in-situ conservation of 
biological diversity, including those containing threatened species of 
outstanding universal value from the point of view of science or 
conservation.”
“The discussion on the Ghats witnessed
 representatives from 17 nations — Algeria,  Cambodia, Columbia, 
Estonia,, Ethiopia, Iraq, Japan, Malaysia, Mali, Mexico, Qatar, Russia, 
Senegal, Serbia, South Africa, the UAE and Thailand —coming out strongly
 in favour of India. The Indian delegation aptly responded to a range of
 questions, clarification and amplifications sought by the members of 
the World Heritage Committee,” Dr. Mathur said.
“The
 positive decision on the Western Ghats is a reflection of India’s 
concerted efforts to inscribe the world’s hottest hotspot on the World 
Heritage List, thus plugging an important and long-standing gap on the 
list,” he said.
The nomination processes thus 
successfully ended a six-year-long campaign of the country for getting 
the sites inscribed on the list. India had been campaigning for the 
inscription since 2006. Recounting the process of campaign, Dr. Mathur 
said that India had submitted a dossier for nomination of 39 sites in 
the Western Ghats spread over Kerala, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and 
Maharashtra to the UNESCO World Heritage Centre in Paris in 2010.
Under
 the Operational Guidelines of the UNESCO World Heritage Convention, 
India’s nomination dossier was peer-reviewed by IUCN experts and 
subsequently an IUCN Technical Evaluation Mission that visited India for
 field evaluation. Based on the inputs received through desk reviews and
 field evaluation, the IUCN recommended to the World Heritage Committee 
to ‘defer’ the consideration of the Western Ghats dossier at the Paris 
session held last year, he pointed out in a communication.
The
 Indian delegation met the members of the 21-nation World Heritage 
Committee to highlight the merits of India’s proposal for inscription of
 the Western Ghats on the list. 
The Russian 
delegation moved a proposal to recommend amendments to the ‘inscription’
 against the IUCN recommendation of ‘deferral,’ he said. 
The
 Union Ministry of Environment and Forests delegation to the 36th 
session comprised Jagdish Kishwan, Additional Director General 
(Wildlife), Dr. Mathur, and S.K. Khanduri, Inspector-General of Forests 
(Wildlife).

 
 
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