Indian treasures in foreign lands
  • I had earlier posted that there was no mention of Indian participation
    in the Cairo conference; this is the first news I have seen of high
    level participation from India - Director General of ASI. Let us hope
    UNESCO forces the western countries to return the ill gotten treasures.
    A compromise solution could be to recognise and transfer the ownership
    to the origin countries, and take them on long lease for display in
    museums.
    sampath India in global bid to get back treasuresSEBANTI SARKAR
    Calcutta, May 17: India has joined a global initiative to restore
    antiquities back to their countries of origin for the first time after
    decades of unsuccessfully trying to reclaim stolen treasures like the
    Koh-i-Noor diamond and the Birmingham Buddha.

    "The legal process for restitution of antiquities is not only
    time-consuming but also expensive. An international campaign with
    Unesco's backing is certainly the better option for us," the
    director-general of the Archaeological Survey of India (ASI), Gautam
    Sengupta, said today, on the eve of International Museum Day.

    Sengupta, who represented India at the Cairo conference hosted by
    Egypt's Supreme Council of Antiquities last month, said India's
    official wish-list included fragments of the vandalised Peacock Throne
    preserved in Persia, the Amravati railings, a stolen Saraswati idol from
    the Bhoj temple that found its way to a museum in Europe and the
    Birmingham Buddha, originally from 7th Century Bihar but now the pride
    of a British museum.

    "We have already petitioned Unesco to amend a convention that bans
    the export or ownership of stolen antiquities acquired after 1970. The
    pact also does not specify what must be done about artefacts stolen
    before 1970, which we want clarified in the amendment. Countries like
    the US must be made a party to the amended pact," the ASI chief
    said.

    The April conference also saw unanimity among the participants —
    Bolivia, China, Cyprus, Greece, Guatemala, Honduras, Iraq, Italy, Libya,
    Mexico, Nigeria, South Korea, Spain, Sri Lanka and Syria — about the
    need to regularly share information about stolen antiquities.

    "We need to be realistic but it is possible to win back national
    treasures if everyone co-operates. Egypt's Supreme Council of
    Antiquities, led by Zahl Hawass, has retrieved some 31,000 artefacts
    since 2002. India has also reclaimed a few antiquities like the bronze
    Vishnu from Sagardighi, Murshidabad, and the Amin relief from Haryana
    with Interpol's help and through diplomatic negotiations,"
    Sengupta said.

    Apart from strengthening laws, the focus of the Cairo conference was how
    to reduce time and legal costs.

    Greece has been locked in a 30-year legal battle with the UK to retrieve
    the Elgin Marbles, a collection of classical Greek sculptures, while
    Peru wants to initiate legal action to reclaim Inca treasures from Yale
    University in the US but doesn't have the resources.

    Sengupta said the conference decided to draw up a single list of
    "unique items" to be returned to their countries of origin
    instead of countries individually spending their resources on legal
    battles. "Once this list is ready, these countries will jointly
    initiate a series of steps, including a diplomatic and legal campaign to
    get back the lost treasures," he added.

    Egypt, which has been trying to get back the Rosetta Stone — it
    contains rare samples of Egyptian hieroglyphic writing — and a bust
    of Queen Nefertiti from foreign museums, had broken off all ties with
    the Louvre in Paris till France returned fragments chipped off the wall
    of an Egyptian tomb.

    So would India also adopt "non-co-operation" as a means to
    retrieve national treasures?

    "Let the official minutes of the Cairo conference arrive and we will
    decide how to go about the joint campaign. Artefacts have and continue
    to be smuggled out of countries like India, China and Egypt. If museums
    in England, America and Europe were to return all such treasures to
    their countries of origin, they would have little left to display,"
    Sengupta said.

    To begin with, he urged state governments to take "stronger
    steps" to curb looting from historical sites and museums.

    Sengupta probably had home state Bengal in mind, where even Rabindranath
    Tagore's Nobel isn't safe.

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