Deliberate
damage to cultural heritage for symbolic purposes during times of conflict has
a long history, but international frameworks for preventing it have been slow
to develop. The destruction of the
Bamiyan Buddhas by the Taliban in 2001 highlights some of the problems facing
conservation of conflict damage, including the important meaning of the damage
itself and the difficulty of creating general international laws that can conform
to the case-by-case nature of heritage.
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