[Newsletter Vol.8] Audrey Azoulay, Director-General of UNESCO, to Attend the Jeju Forum
2018-06-15 00:00:00
Audrey Azoulay, Director-General of UNESCO, to Attend the Jeju Forum
First Visit by Head of UNESCO to Jeju Island
Audrey Azoulay, Director-General of UNESCO, will visit Jeju Island to attend the 13th JejuForum for Peace and Prosperity, becoming the first incumbent head of UNESCO to do so.Her visit is expected to provide the momentum to further develop cooperative ties betweenUNESCO and the Jeju Island, which was designated as Biosphere in 2002, World NaturalHeritage in 2007 and Global Geopark in 2011, and whose folk ritual, ChilmeoridangYeongdeunggut, and traditional hanyeo (women divers) culture were inscribed as IntangibleCultural Heritages.Director-General Azoulay will speak in the special dialogue session with the theme of“UNESCO’s Unique Mandate for Peace and Development: Multilateral Cooperation throughEducation, Culture and the Sciences” at 10:50-11:40 a.m. on June 28 with the Governor ofJeju Special Self-Governing Province, Won Hee-ryong, who is also chairman of the JejuForum Organizing Committee. She will discuss how to build peace on the Korean peninsula,as well as sharing her views on the future value of Jeju Island and the role of UNESCO. Thedialogue will be moderated by Bak Sangmee, dean of the Graduate School of Internationaland Area Studies at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies. Prior to the dialogue session, theDirector-General will hold a press conference at 10 a.m.Upon the inter-Korean summit meeting on Apr. 27, the Director-General has said in hertweet, “I welcome the historic statement issued today by the Korean leaders. My hope is thatit paves a way to lasting peace on the Korean Peninsula. UNESCO stands ready to contributethrough active cooperation in all its fields of competencies.”Given the main theme of the Jeju Forum, “Reengineering Peace for Asia,” and the easedtension following the inter-Korean summit meeting this year, it is noteworthy how theDirector-General will address the peace issue, and the roles of UNESCO and Jeju Island inthat context.The Jeju Special Self-Governing Province is planning to propose in 2019 to establish the“Global Research and Training Center for Internationally Designated Areas” under theauspices of UNESCO. The province will submit the application for the UNESCO center nextJanuary.At the moment of its foundation after World War II, UNESCO was entrusted with a uniquemission inscribed in its Constitution: “it is in the minds of men and women that the defencesof peace must be constructed.” UNESCO has been carrying out this mission for over 70 yearsnow, through education, culture, and the sciences, reaching out to local populations in everyregion of the world. The challenges faced by humanity at the beginning of this 21st centuryare no longer the same as those in 1945. But the need for multilateral cooperation is just asurgent. It is crucial to maintain and reinforce this cooperation, and to find original andinnovative means to guarantee peace and sustainable development. There is no otheralternative.UNESCO was established in 1945 as a United Nations organization to contribute to peaceand progress of humanity. In 1942-1944 during World War II, the education ministers of theallied countries held meetings in London and agreed to set up an international organizationto reconstruct the educational system and build world peace. The representatives of 37countries adopted the UNESCO Charter in London on Nov. 16, 1945. As of December 2017,UNESCO is composed of 195 member states and 11 associate member countries. UNESCO’smission is to contribute to world peace and sustainable development by promotinginternational cooperation.