-
Bulgaria's 'Bangaranga' wins Eurovision, with Israel second
-
Musk wants SpaceX to go public. Here's how it works
-
Big risks and rewards in upcoming IPOs at SpaceX, OpenAI, Anthropic
-
Pal in last duo could ease nerves for PGA leader Smalley
-
Ronaldo suffers more agony as Al Nassr lose 1-0 in AFC final
-
Venezuela expels Maduro ally Alex Saab to US again
-
Rising star Woad in charge at LPGA Queen City Championship
-
Rodgers returning with Steelers for 22nd season
-
Rahm on PGA: 'It's a battle out there'
-
Dara: dancing to victory at Eurovision
-
Napoleon Solo wins 151st Preakness Stakes
-
Last 10 Eurovision winners
-
Smalley grabs PGA lead as wild final day showdown looms
-
Canada cruise passenger 'presumptive positive' for hantavirus
-
Five share PGA lead logjam with wild final day in store
-
Decision time at full-throttle Eurovision final
-
McIlroy charges into the hunt for epic major comeback win
-
Iran confirms squad heading to Turkey for World Cup preparation
-
Bolivian police clash with protesters blocking roads
-
Eurovision final kicks off with Viennese grandeur
-
Svitolina sees off Gauff to win Italian Open, Sinner in men's title showdown
-
Alonso set for appointment as Chelsea manager: reports
-
Spanish star Javier Bardem says 'narrative changing' on Gaza
-
Gujarat miss out on top spot as Kolkata stay alive in IPL
-
Charging McIlroy grabs share of the PGA lead
-
Rwanda genocide suspect Kabuga dead: court
-
No beer for City stars despite FA Cup win, says Guardiola
-
Modi oversees semi-conductor deal on Dutch trip
-
Americans 'should demonstrate like the French,' says Woody Harrelson
-
Vienna abuzz for Eurovision final
-
McFarlane eyes 'massive' Spurs clash after FA Cup final defeat
-
Scuffles from Europe to NYC as Swatch sale descends into chaos
-
Bielle-Biarrey helps Bordeaux-Begles avoid Top 14 slip-up before Champions Cup final
-
Man City still dream of Premier League glory after FA Cup win: Silva
-
Hearts broken as O'Neill summons Celtic's champion spirit
-
'Dance all night': Harry Styles kicks off World Tour in Amsterdam
-
Kane hits hat-trick, St. Pauli relegated from Bundesliga
-
Semenyo's magic moment fires Man City to FA Cup final win over Chelsea
-
Football back on war-battered pitches in Sudan capital
-
Opposition Latvian lawmaker tapped to form interim government
-
Kane hits hat-trick, St. Pauli are relegated from Bundesliga
-
Modi oversees semiconductor deal on Dutch trip
-
UK's ex-health minister Streeting says will run to replace PM Keir Starmer
-
Israel could wean itself off US defence aid, but not yet
-
Narvaez racks up second stage win at Giro d'Italia
-
Kim, Rose and Kirk charge into PGA hunt as McIlroy starts his third round
-
Whale that was rescued after stranded in Germany found dead in Denmark
-
Star Julianne Moore hates 'guns and explosions', warns women are losing out
-
No vaccine for latest Ebola outbreak, DRC warns as as toll hits 80
-
Sinner completes Medvedev win and passage into Italian Open final
'Incomprehensible': Red Cross museum fears closure amid Swiss funding cuts
The Red Cross museum in Geneva is warning that it risks closure after its funding was axed in a broad government cost-cutting plan, with some suggesting it could be moved to Abu Dhabi.
The International Red Cross and Red Crescent Museum has been a national institution in Switzerland for nearly four decades, playing a key role in promoting and explaining international humanitarian law and principles in the birthplace of the Geneva Conventions.
Museum director Pascal Hufschmid said he was shocked to learn last September that the fate of the museum was, apparently inadvertently, being threatened by a small administrative measure in a government savings drive.
"It jeopardises the very existence of the museum," the Swiss historian, who took the helm of the institution in 2019, told AFP in a recent interview.
The museum, built adjacent to the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) headquarters, opened in 1988. It welcomes around 120,000 people annually, ranging from elementary school classes to visiting dignitaries.
It keeps a collection of around 30,000 objects, including the first Nobel Peace Prize medal, given in 1901 to Red Cross founder Henry Dunant, an award shared with the French pacifist Frederic Passy.
It also houses the archives of the ICRC's International Prisoners of War Agency, established to restore contact between people separated during World War I, which have been listed on UNESCO's Memory of the World Register.
- 'Incredible heritage' -
"Through this incredible heritage," Hufschmid said, the aim is to create "a dialogue on what humanitarian action means on a daily basis".
He said the Swiss government had long recognised the value of the museum, and its role in telling "the story of an idea born in Switzerland, of major figures of Swiss history", like Dunant.
Since 1991, the private museum has received an annual subsidy from the Swiss foreign ministry of 1.1 million francs ($1.2 million), accounting for about a quarter of its overall budget.
But a general cost-cutting measure, proposed by a group of experts and approved by the government last September, included the decision to transfer responsibility for subsidising the museum to the culture ministry.
At first, Hufschmid said he was not too concerned at what appeared to be merely an administrative change, until he realised "the transfer actually meant a major reduction of the subsidy".
This was because the culture ministry requires museums seeking its funding to take part in a competition, facing off against hundreds of other museums.
When successful, Hufschmid said, museums typically obtain a subsidy of "between five and seven percent of their expenses, (which) in our case would mean approximately 300,000 francs".
- 'Structural deficit' -
"Suddenly, I understood that we would be facing a structural deficit starting 2027, (and) that we would have to close," he said, calling the situation "totally incomprehensible".
He said the government decision was taken as Switzerland marked the 75th anniversary of the adoption of the Geneva Conventions, and amid warnings of dwindling respect for international humanitarian law.
Hufschmid has since been lobbying parliamentarians and decision-makers with ideas to save the museum.
The Geneva canton has stepped up its support, and parliamentarians both at the regional and national levels have voiced support for the institution -- but so far the threat of closure remains.
Hufschmid has proposed nationalisation among other possible solutions.
Others have raised the possibility of moving the museum, with suggestions that Abu Dhabi, which hosts other museums including an outpost of the Louvre, could house its collection.
But Hufschmid said such a move "doesn't make any sense".
"We were shocked when we heard that, because we are so deeply connected to Swiss identity, to Swiss heritage, to ideas born in Switzerland... (as) the depository state of the Geneva Conventions," he said.
"We are a Swiss museum and we will stay in Switzerland."
J.Williams--AMWN