UNESCO's World Heritage committee added 23 sites considered representative of Japan's industrial revolution under Emperor Meiji (1868-1910) to its vaunted list, at a meeting taking place in the western German city of Bonn until July 8.
Tokyo's bid to have the sites listed -- including a steelworks, a shipbuilding yard and a coal mine -- had touched off a diplomatic spat because South Korea and China say that seven of them became centres for deportation and forced labour during their respective Japanese occupations.
Given the assurance, Seoul said it would not block the Japanese bid.
Elsewhere, the United States succeeded in its bid to have the 18th century Spanish-built San Antonio Missions in Texas added to the world heritage list.
The five Spanish Roman Catholic sites built in and around what is now the city of San Antonio -- including the Alamo fort, where in 1836 some 180 Texans fighting for independence from Mexico died in battle against Mexican General Santa Anna's army of several thousand soldiers.
The complexes "illustrate the Spanish Crown's efforts to colonize, evangelize and defend the northern frontier of New Spain," the cultural body added.
It said the San Antonio Missions were also an example of the interweaving of Spanish and Coahuiltecan cultures, including the decorative elements of churches, which combined Catholic symbols with indigenous designs inspired by nature.
Inclusion on UNESCO's World Heritage list can bring economic benefits, because as well as being a powerful tourist draw, world heritage sites are eligible for financial assistance towards preservation.
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