In today's secret ballot, the international body agreed to retain the site on the list of endangered world heritage and criticized Israel for its continuous refusal to let the body's experts access Jerusalem's holy sites to determine their conservation status. The document refers to the Jerusalem site that Jews called Temple Mount only by its Arab name, a significant semantic decision also adopted by UNESCO's Executive Board last week that triggered condemnation from Israel and its allies.
The resolution was passed by the World Heritage Committee's 21 member countries. Ten countries voted for, two against, 8 abstained and one was absent. Neither Israel, the U.S. Nor Palestine is on the World Heritage Committee.
Israel suspended ties with UNESCO earlier this month over a similar resolution.
Elias Sanbar, the Palestinian ambassador to UNESCO, fired back at those upset with the resolution, which was sponsored by his delegation.
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The site in Jerusalem has been on UNESCO's endangered list since 1982.
UNESCO's World Heritage Site list is known throughout the world for its work in highlighting sites of historic and cultural significance, and endangered global heritage.
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