Thursday, February 14, 2019

WiÄ™cej Egypt: Former minister’s brother arrested for smuggled antiquities


Corruption in high places in corrupt state: 'Former minister’s brother arrested for smuggled antiquities'
The Egyptian prosecution arrested the brother of former Finance Minister Youssef Boutros Ghali on Wednesday, February 13 for four days under investigation in the case of Italy’s diplomatic bags of smuggled antiquities. Attorney General Nabil Sadek officially announced the arrival of the smuggled antiquities at Cairo Airport on July 30. Last year, the Egyptian Public Prosecution recognized the presence of Egyptian antiquities seized in the Italian city Salerno. Accordingly, Sadek ordered widespread investigations about these seizures. [...] 195 small pieces were found, in addition to 21,660 ancient metal coins. Egypt’s public prosecution immediately informed the Italian authorities that Egypt has the full right to have these smuggled antiquities back. 

Thursday, February 7, 2019

India: Video shows vandals wrecking Hampi’s UNESCO world heritage site


Three Indian natives were caught on video in India as authorities hunt down the vandals seen toppling over ancient temple pillars in a viral video.
 The video circulating on social media shows three men deliberately pushing over the centuries-old pillars at Vishnu Temple in the ancient village of Hampi, a UNESCO world heritage site that came second on The New York Times’ “52 Places to Go in 2019” list released just days ago. In the video, the trio can be seen shoving a pillar over before it crashes to the ground, joining other pillars that met a similar fate.
India: Video shows vandals wrecking Hampi’s UNESCO world heritage site

The Indians are not even monitoring this world-class heritage site enough to be able to say when this act took place, beyond saying it's 'in the last two years'. With such incompetence displayed, it seems Indian heritage objects are safer in Western collections.
 

India: Ex-temple official held in idols theft case


Antique idols were stolen from the nearly 1,300-year-old shrine.
The Idol Wing CID branch on Tuesday arrested K. Anandkumar Rao, former executive officer of the Arulmigu Tharukavaneswarar Temple at Tirupparaithurai, near Tiruchi on the charge of stealing three idols from the shrine and making a replica of one of them. Anandkumar [...] had been absconding for over seven months, said an Idol Wing CID release. It had earlier arrested the temple accountant Kannan and another person, ‘Thirumalaikatti' Ramanathan, in connection with the case. [...] Antique vessels from the temple were also stolen and used for making the new idol, said sources.
India: Ex-temple official held in idols theft case

Tuesday, February 5, 2019

Stop Creeping Marxism Eroding our Rights


Collectors need to have their say on the Treasure Act of the British Isles. The British government has opened a public consultation on this pioneering piece of archaeological legislation. Collector's Rights are once again under assault and we need to tell them what we think!  According to expert activist John Howland on his excellent 'Detecting and Collecting" blog ("The end is nigh! But if you detect…VOTE!"), the English government has always been mysteriously sucked-in by Marxist sentiments when it comes to the heritage and archaeologists there will stop at nothing until all land would belong to the people and there would be a nationalisation of all antiquities.
 Now, thanks to the myopic and compliant Department of Media Culture and Sport, unsurprisingly, this Marxist nightmare is about to come true. The reptiles are already crawling into the sunlight from beneath their stones. Single coin finds of precious metals along with those of non-precious metals will soon become ‘Treasure’ under the intended changes to the Treasure Act. At first glance this looks advantageous, but if the proposals go ahead to tighten regulations, then archaeological digging of any sort (by professional archaeologists and others) will only be allowed by permit. Archaeologists and the Crown will have first dibs over what Detectorists or anyone else for that matter can keep in their private collections. Put another way, no-one would be allowed to search even their own land with a metal detector WITHOUT WRITTEN PERMISSION. 
If artefact hunting with a metal detector is solely allowed by permit-led archaeological approval, on what grounds one wonders, would the hobby be even allowed? The answer is clear…it won’t!

Comment from James M. Fielding:
And here I thought the PAS was etched in stone. The vile creatures inhabiting the socialist sewer once again somehow make it into the light again without being squashed as is their due, to try and redirect the scheme to their own miserable ends. Fight the good fight there John…a good example of never take your eyes off the sewer…credible threats against the hobby and the pastime still lurk there.  
Peter Tompa has similar observations (Public Consultation on Proposed Changes to UK's Treasure Act):
The proposals that require permits to metal detect, that create a new offense for purchases of undeclared artifacts, and declare archaeological finds Crown Property, are potentially very problematic. A permit requirement could be used to preclude detecting from “archaeologically sensitive areas,” which could mean everything. The proposed new criminal sanction could catch unwary buyers of objects that did not realize they were buying "treasure." Moreover, collectors should oppose the proposal's efforts to shift the burden of proof in a criminal matter. Declaring all finds crown property may be a way to avoid paying fair market value for finds the State retains. If you are a metal detectorist, an ancient coin collector, or just think the UK's current PAS and Treasure Act do a great job of bringing the public, museums and archaeologists together in a joint effort to record and preserve the past, please consider commenting. Comments are due on or before April 30, 2019.
For more about the issue, see https://culturalpropertynews.org/uk-changes-treasure-act/ For a direct link to the consultation, see https://www.gov.uk/government/consultations/revising-the-definition-of-treasure-in-the-treasure-act-1996-and-revising-the-related-codes-of-practice

 If these measures go through, in one fell swoop, metal detecting in the UK will soon be annihilated as we now currently know and enjoy it and will soon be brought under direct archeological control. We must stop this happening, as this will affect collectors everywhere.

Wednesday, January 23, 2019

Antiquities ministry starts inventory of artefact storehouses throughout Egypt


Egypt’s Ministry of Antiquities has only now launched a campaign to make an inventory of all store galleries in archaeological sites around Egypt.
The galleries consist of three types of storages; museological storehouses, subsidiary storehouses, and those belonging to archaeological missions. Mostafa Waziri, secretary-general of the Supreme Council of Antiquities, told Ahram Online that the committee in charge of the inventory campaign, established in 2017, has inventoried 34 museological storehouses in early January and has found no missing artefacts. The ministry started yesterday an inventory of the subsidiary storehouses and those of archaeological missions that had not been opened or cataloged for several years.
Already evidence of poor stewardship has come to light, for example in a mastaba in Saqqara that was used as a store gallery and had not been inventoried since 1997
Upon entering the mastaba, the committee found evidence of attempts to remove some of the iron beams from the metal ceiling of the mastaba’s open court. The door of the mastaba was closed and sealed with stamps marked 1997. The committee has reported the attempted break-in to the Tourism and Antiquities Police and will continue with the inventory procedures to check if there are any missing objects.
(Antiquities ministry starts inventory of artefact storehouses throughout Egypt)

Monday, January 21, 2019

Iraq's Archaeological Sites Face Looting, Urbanisation Threats


Anarchic development and looting in war-torn Iraq are the greatest threats to its treasure trove of archaeological heritage, warned Iraqi archaeologist Lamia al-Gailani  (Karen Dabrowska, "Iraq's Archaeological Sites Face Looting, Urbanisation Threats" https://thearabweekly.com 2019-01-19).
Gailani, an associate researcher at London University's School of Oriental and African Studies, said more than one-third of the site of the ancient Assyrian city of Nineveh, on the outskirts of Mosul, has been covered with houses. "Archaeology is never a priority for any government," Gailani said. "It has always been like that and now, with Iraq's financial difficulties, the last place they want to put money is into archaeology."
Gailani left Iraq to live in Britain in the 1970s, but has returned to her homeland for a few months every year to continue her work. She said she was particularly concerned about the looting and sale of artefacts, illicit trade among militiamen and Islamic State militants who destroyed many of Iraq's archaeological riches.
"One way to stop the looters is for the Iraq State Board of Antiquities and Heritage (SBAH) to start digging for the objects looters are after," she said. "The board has a large excavations and survey department but it has to cover the whole of Iraq. We have thousands of archaeological sites and the department does not have enough staff. They can't stop the looting and much of the development on archaeological sites." 
But Western museums and collectors could help to save the objects.