https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GjAGbVRU52w
Cambodian officials say they are considering asking US museums for the return of their stolen objects. |
The Cambodian government has filed suit in a US court to have a statue that was looted from this site seized from the giant auction house Sotheby’s.
Brian Calvert, VOA Khmer
21 July 2012
LOS ANGELES - Two empty pedestals at Koh Ker temple, in Siem Reap province, mark a battleground that has big implications for Western museums. They are the feet of two looted statues that ended up in America.
The Cambodian government has filed suit in a US court to have a statue that was looted from this site seized from the giant auction house Sotheby’s. And now Cambodian officials say they are considering asking US museums for the return of their stolen objects.
Jason Felch, an investigative reporter for the Los Angeles Times and an author on a book about the antiquities trade, says the case is drawing battle lines.
“On the one side, you have museums and private collectors, who argue passionately that these objects are really best off in these big museums where a lot of people can access them, where scholars can study them,” he says. “On the other hand, you have source countries, countries that have been the subject of lots of looting, who have lost a lot of their cultural heritage. And they’re saying, ‘Look, your beautiful museum is the result of our plunder, and we want some of those objects back.’”
The question is whether these antiquities were looted from the country before there were laws that might require their return. Both museums and Sotheby’s argue it is unknown when the statues were looted.
2 comments:
Destroyed and sold all national treasures, now pretend to ask the buyers to return the items they bought?
DO NOT RETURN, UNLESS THESE DUMB PEASANTS IN POWER PAY QUADRUPLE PRICE.
hint hout os heuy khmer, stop destroying and looting from cambodia, ok! we know the world like beautiful khmer sculptures, etc, but stop looting from cambodia, please.
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