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UNESCO must be consulted before Liget Project goes ahead

A Budapest district mayor insists the project warrants consultation with UNESCO because the City Park is located in a world heritage site

Budapest should seek an expert opinion from UNESCO on the planned Liget Project, a scheme involving the construction of a museum quarter in Budapest’s City Park, the mayor of Budapest’s 14th district has said.

According to Politics.hu, Gergely Karácsony told a press conference ahead of a meeting of the municipal assembly that the project warrants consultation with UNESCO because the City Park is located in a world heritage site.

If Budapest fails to consult the cultural heritage body before approving the project, the resolution could be considered legally invalid, Karácsony said.

Municipal leaders have so far ignored both professional and civil protests over the project and are now set to pass a resolution that will make way for the destruction of the City Park, he said.

Earlier on Wednesday, civic activist group Ligetvédők said municipal leaders plan to chop down more than 2,000 trees in the near future.

Gergely Csák, one of the activists, said the tree-felling would lead to an environmental disaster.

Silent protests were held at the city assembly against plans to cut down 600-800 trees in the City Park to make way for the state-backed museum quarter.

Another mass tree-felling is planned at the banks of the River Danube in northern Buda affecting 1,100 trees while in the Orczy Park in Pest plans are to fell 300.