The Arab world should propose more natural sites for the U.N.'s World Heritage list after having only two new ones listed in the past 15 years, AP quoted a conservation group as saying on Tuesday. The International Union for Conservation of Nature said in a report released Tuesday that the Middle East and nearby region has the fewest natural World Heritage sites. Only four are listed, including Banc d'Arguin National Park in Mauritania, Ichkeul National Park in Tunisia, the Socotra Archipelago in Yemen and the Wadi Al-Hitan in Egypt. Jordan has proposed the Wadi Rum protected area for designation as a cultural and natural site at the meeting of the World Heritage committee in Paris, which runs until June 29. It is one of 37 sites up for designation. «The Arab states are home to an exceptional natural wealth and diversity, with striking desert landscapes and marine areas,» said Haifaa Abdulhalim, IUCN's World Heritage officer in the Arab states. «The process of nominating natural sites in the Arab region needs a major overhaul if we want to see more of them on the World Heritage list.» The report also found the 18-state region does far less to monitor and promote natural sites like marine reserves and desert landscapes than for cultural sites like pyramids and ancient fortifications. It found that 12 states had 35 sites which have potential to be listed but so far haven't been nominated. It found that 91 percent of states had inventories of cultural sites but nothing similar for natural sites. Also, cultural institutions in these countries «were not well equipped» to manage natural sites, and environmental ministries have often been locked out of the nomination process. -- SPA