News
New Red List Aimed to Protect Cambodian Heritage

Rob Carmichael of Deutsche Presse-Agentur in Phnom Penh reports;
Road workers uncovered a treasure trove of ancient artefacts 10 years ago at Phum Snay in western Cambodia. Among the finds were jewellery, ceramic pottery and even human bones.

But shortly after news of the find got out, looters moved in. Within a year, Phum Snay had been stripped bare and its archaeological worth destroyed.

Cambodian authorities are struggling to stem the illegal trade in plundered artefacts. A new colour booklet published by archeologists called the Red List aims to teach police and border officials what to look for.

The looting of ancient sites and temples is a long and common problem in Cambodia, which has to balance widespread poverty and inefficient policing with a rich cultural heritage that gave the world the magnificent temple complex at Angkor Wat, the drawing card for 2 million foreign tourists each year.

Experts say numerous temples and sites around the country have been hacked at and dug up in recent years by those looking to make money from unscrupulous buyers of Khmer statues and jewellery.

Dougald O'Reilly is the founder and director of Heritage Watch, an award-winning non-governmental organization set up to preserve Cambodia's heritage in the face of its wholesale destruction.

'The level of looting is almost unprecedented with hectare after hectare being illegally excavated and the resulting artefacts flooding the market,' O'Reilly says. 'Soon there will be little left to document Cambodia's prehistoric past.'

Cambodian authorities released the Red List to try to combat this trade. It is an eight-page glossy booklet listing the types of Khmer artefacts most at risk of being stolen and smuggled out of the country.

The list was produced in collaboration with the International Council of Museums and is the sixth of its kind in the council's efforts to combat the illicit trade in artefacts around the world.

The publication describes the categories of artefacts to look out for and includes their key characteristics as well as illustrated examples. It aims to be easier to use for non-specialists, such as border agents, than previous documents, which contained lengthy lists of specific missing items.

Hab Touch, the outgoing director of the National Museum in Phnom Penh, says the Red List is a useful tool to improve the capacities of front-line officials.

'It is designed especially for police, customs officers and also people who are responsible for protecting cultural heritage to help understand what kinds of Khmer artefacts are now at risk,' he says.

Hab Touch says the list's importance is underscored by the fact that protecting every historical temple and site scattered around Cambodia is practically impossible, which makes educating those who man the borders essential.

Some experts say the problem of looting has worsened since the collapse of the Khmer Rouge in the late 1990s, not least because its downfall allowed for development in areas that were previously off-limits.

Helen Jessup, a scholar and author of books about Cambodia's cultural heritage, says new roads and the clearance of heavily mined parts of the country, for instance, have opened up new areas to plunder. She adds that even some well-known Cambodian sites have suffered in recent years despite being policed.

She says, however, that she is optimistic about the impact of methods such as the Red List, provided the leaflets get to the right people. 'They certainly help customs agents and border inspectors,' she says.

The information should also reach tourists and other potential customers, she adds. 'Then the honest guys would be forewarned,' she says.

Hab Touch says an earlier watch list released in 1993, which focused on 100 specific looted items, resulted in the return of 10 of them.

Those pieces are now on display in the National Museum, and Hab Touch says plans are under way to publish a new book of all known missing items once sufficient documentation has been collated to prove national ownership.

But the recovery of stolen artefacts gives only a limited insight into the extent of the problem. Gauging its scale is an impossible task since the trade is by nature an underground activity.

The illicit trade in archeological artefacts is driven by the high prices commanded by items such as stone and bronze heads, particularly in the context of the country's endemic poverty.

One paper written by a Heritage Watch researcher four years ago analyzed more than 300 Khmer artefacts auctioned at Sotheby's in New York.

It found that the offer prices ranged from 7,500 dollars to almost 30,000 dollars each. Around 80 per cent of the pieces had no known provenance, raising suspicions that they were stolen.

Heritage Watch's O'Reilly says domestic and regional buyers account for most of the illicit demand for Khmer antiquities. It is because many items are small, easy to smuggle and hard to identify as ancient that the Red List may prove so useful, he says.

But the experts agree that a single document cannot counteract the demand for stolen Khmer artefacts. Given Cambodia's poverty, its inability to protect many of its ancient sites and its porous borders, the plunder of its cultural heritage is likely to continue.

 
Cypriot smuggling ring smashed

Mon Jan 25, 2010 02:35 PM ET
Menelaos Hadjicostis, Associated Press

Authorities have busted a smuggling ring in Cyprus and recovered dozens of ancient artifacts it planned to sell for 11 million Euros ($15.5 million), including a miniature gold coffin, silver coins and terra-cotta urns, police said Monday.

In what is believed to be the largest antiquities theft case of its kind in the Mediterranean island's history, police seized the artifacts dating back thousands of years from homes, storage sheds and vehicles where they were being hidden.

The artifacts include copper and silver coins, terra-cotta urns and clay and limestone figurines believed to date from the Copper Age to around 400 B.C., Cyprus Antiquities Curator Maria Hadjicosti told The Associated Press.

Ten Cypriots were arrested during the raids over the weekend, and authorities were searching for another five suspects, including a Syrian man, police spokesman Michalis Katsounotos said. The suspects face charges of illegally possessing and trading in antiquities.

Police said the smugglers had planned to sell the artifacts in Cyprus, but would not identify the buyer. Authorities also said they were investigating where the artifacts had been obtained.

Katsounotos said this was Cyprus' largest antiquities smuggling case in terms of the amount of recovered artifacts, their archaeological value and the number of arrests.

Most of the artifacts are urns primarily found around the southern coastal towns of Limassol and Paphos, Hadjicosti said. Some of the coins could date to Hellenistic and Roman times.

The curator said some of the recovered artifacts, including the gold coffin and other gold objects, don't appear to be Cypriot, and more study was needed to determine their precise origins.

Communications Minister Nikos Nikolaides said the bust was conducted with the help of Greek authorities, but he wouldn't provide details. He also said some of the antiquities may have been dug up from archaeological sites in the breakaway Turkish Cypriot north of the island.

Excavations on Cyprus have uncovered settlements dating back to around 9000 B.C. Cyprus then saw successive waves of colonization, including Phoenicians, Mycenaean Greeks, Romans and, in the Middle Ages, Franks and Venetians. The island was conquered by Ottoman Turks in 1571 and became part of the British Empire in 1878 before winning independence in 1960.

Violence between Cyprus' majority Greek community and the Turkish community broke out shortly after, and the island has been divided along ethnic lines since a Turkish invasion in 1974 -- prompted by a failed coup aimed at union with Greece.

Originally posted at; http://news.discovery.com/archaeology/ancient-artifacts-theft-smuggling.html

 

 
Asia fights to stem loss of cultural treasures

By Thomas Kean Myanmar
Times December 22, 2008

“HISTORY for sale” reads the caption, below a Myanmar sandstone figure from the 16th century. Under the headline “The thrill is in the hunt”, the article – published last year in a major Australian newspaper – tells readers how to find “bargain antiques” in Bangkok “without being had” by dealers.

“Bangkok is a clearing house for treasures from all parts of Indochina – Myanmar, Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia. It’s where all the very finest art works go,” the article gushes.

Celadon ceramics from Chiang Mai. Wooden Buddha figures from Myanmar. Hmong textiles from Laos.

It’s all there, in an orgy of consumerism that left the reporter exclaiming they’ve rarely entered a Bangkok antique shop “and not found at least one piece that is simply screaming to be bought”.

However, it is not mentioned once that taking these objects out of their country of origin is usually illegal. The emphasis in this article is how buyers can avoid being “jipped”, rather than whether they are stealing a country’s heritage.

Most countries in Southeast Asia have laws to protect their cultural heritage. Myanmar has a long list of items that cannot be legally taken out of the country, including religious items, such as Buddha images and parabaik, bronze and clay pipes and bronze, stone or wood sculptures or carvings.

“According to [the Antiquities Act], antique items are not allowed to be traded locally or abroad,” says U San Win, the director general of the Department of Archaeology under the Ministry of Culture. “Any item which will be exported abroad should have an expert’s opinion from the Department of Archaeology that the items are not antiques. The expert must check it thoroughly and issue a certificate for it.”

“It is important for us that our country’s cultural properties are preserved. We are also cooperating with the neighbouring countries.”

Dr Rachanie Thosarta, formerly of the Fine Arts Department in Thailand, has dedicated much of her life to fighting the illicit trade in antiques in her home country and abroad.

She says Thailand is a “large market for the sale of illegal antiquities … [despite] legislation designed to safeguard cultural heritage”.

She describes trading of illicit antiques in Thailand and neighbouring countries as a “cancer. … The trading never stops”.

It is hard to say how much money changes hands in this illicit trade. Dougald O’Reilly, the founder and director of Heritage Watch, a Phnom Penh-based NGO, quotes sources that put the value of cultural items smuggled from Southeast Asia at US$22 million annually. Trafficking in stolen works of art and national treasures is valued at up to $8 billion a year, according to the Federal Bureau of Investigation in the US.

But it is equally hard to define exactly what is illicit trading. Heritage Watch project coordinator Terressa Davis told Inter Press Service that “80 percent of the catalogues of international auction houses have no provenance” – the information on an item’s origin and history of ownership.

“The absence of provenance could mean either they really don’t know where the item came from, or the information could be incriminating,” she says.
In Myanmar, provenance is often hard to come by, says archaeologist Bob Hudson, who has worked extensively in the country.

“It is very difficult to tell whether something is genuine,” Mr Hudson, from Australia’s University of Sydney, says. “I think most of what is sold to foreigners as ‘antiques’ are actually copies or at least more recent material – say within the last 120 years – which often come from old monasteries.”

He cites the recent example of three Bagan bronzes, which sold for “several hundred thousand dollars but then turned out to be of recent Mandalay manufacture”.

“One story I have heard is how bronze makers will take a statue, treated with some kind of sulphur mix, and place it with a villager somewhere – so when the scouts for the antique shops come looking for old stuff that has been dug up, they buy the bronze from the ‘simple’ farmer, and from then on its provenance is genuine – ‘I got it from the farmer who dug it up.’”

“This does not mean that ‘genuine’ antiques do not sometimes find their way out of the country, but I suspect they are greatly outnumbered by reproductions.”

“The important pieces, whether genuinely antique or not, seem often to end up in the hands of local collectors, or in some cases the archaeology department or museums.”

It is the underground trade that is most worrying for those fighting antique smuggling. Ernelle Berliet, an archaeologist who wrote her thesis about Myanmar, agrees that many objects for sale in Bangkok are most likely reproductions.

“But some are likely to be real and the greatest pieces are usually not displayed in the gallery but stay underground and go directly from the seller to the customer without being displayed,” Ms Berliet says.

Despite the best efforts of the authorities in the region, it seems some antiques are slipping through the cracks. On January 25, The New York Times reported that FBI agents had raided a gallery and four museums in California as part of an investigation into the smuggling of looted antiquities from four countries, including Myanmar and Thailand.

While the items are not believed to be particularly rare or valuable, the perpetrators were caught largely because they were defrauding the Internal Revenue Service, which would indicate many more items are being smuggled undetected.

In a further twist, the antiquities were illegally imported because they were labelled as reproductions – with a “Made in Thailand” sticker.

But Ms Berliet says the market in Bangkok appears to have shifted from Myanmar antiques to countries with less stringent anti-smuggling laws.

“What I see mostly for sale these days in Bangkok, in terms of very ancient art, is a lot of pieces from Bengal that are unfortunately real. A lot of them are from the first centuries CE, while others are pala sculptures from the 10th to 12th century CE.”

There is some evidence that many of Myanmar’s treasures may have already left the country – particularly in the period before 1988 – for two reasons.

In the colonial era, there was a “commonly held notion that westerners could just take stuff, sometimes with a semi-official payment”, Mr Hudson says. Many pieces ended up in British museums. London’s Victoria and Albert Museum still has a significant collection of Myanmar pieces. Some items were returned in 1964 in a gesture of goodwill, including King Thibaw’s 8-metre-high throne, which is now on display in Yangon’s National Museum.

Experts are largely in agreement on how to combat the trade in antiques. While punitive measures may have some effect, cooperation at the national level coupled with education at the grassroots level are considered the most effective method.

Heritage Watch says education has begun to work in Cambodia, which has seen many of its Khmer artefacts end up in Bangkok shops and auction houses. Mr Rasmi is also an advocate of education but says buyers should also be targeted by education campaigns.

“Education about the past is a powerful tool to make people aware of their history, identity, heritage, and community or national pride,” Mr Rasmi says. “We need to promote a new perspective about the value of artefacts, and show that they are meaningless if we don’t know their context. We must change the public perception of artefacts solely as art objects.”

Dr Rachanie Thosarta is more blunt.
“The main problem is the demand; rich people want to buy and collect these antiques,” she says.

In Myanmar, most businesses have moved away from genuine antiques to reproductions and are not afraid to admit it.

Dr Thant Thaw Kaung, the managing director of Nandawun on Baho Road in Ahlone township, says most buyers here are happy to purchase high quality reproductions of Myanmar handicrafts.

“The Western market is very much interested in antiques but these don’t need to be real – as long as they look like antiques, that’s fine. So we call them reproductions and don’t promote them as antiques,” he says. “Most of our customers ask for a reproduction these days. They understand the dangers of exporting real antiques and understand that we want to protect against that.”

“Some customers will hunt for the real antiques, most of which have left the country already,” he says. “Maybe five or six years ago when I went to Bangkok and Chiang Mai I would see a lot of real, genuine antiques. But I think the law enforcement agencies on the Myanmar side have clamped down a lot and so there are more and more reproductions.”

He says local companies – with the exception of a few who deal in religious antiques – also know they have a responsibility to preserve Myanmar’s heritage.

“These items are the treasure of our country,” he says, “and if they end up in private collections then no one can see them.”

 
Hertiage Watch Awarded AIA Grant
Ongoing conservation efforts at the dilapidated Banteay Chhmar temple complex in northwestern Banteay Meanchey province have received a substantial boost in the form of a site-preservation grant from the Archeological Institute of America (AIA), the organisation announced in a press release.

Heritage Watch, the grant recipient, is a partner of the Global Heritage Fund, which launched restoration efforts in 2008 in collaboration with the Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts and several other NGOs.

In a press release, the AIA said: “With new road improvements, the site is expected to become a major tourist attraction for those travelling from Thailand to Cambodia’s major archaeological attraction, Angkor Wat,” making it essential to advance conservation efforts quickly, as well as to establish community-based enterprises that “protect the site, rather than destroy it”.

Conservationists also fear that the road improvements, particularly National Highway 6 linking Siem Reap with Poipet, will accelerate the looting of Banteay Chhmar. The temple’s proximity to Thailand means that antiquities can disappear undetected into the jungles across the border.

The Angkor-period temples have already lost a number of significant features, including six of the eight massive bas-reliefs depicting Buddhist divinity Avalokitesvara.

Ok Sophon, Director General of Heritage at the Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts and head of the ministry’s efforts at Banteay Chhmar, acknowledged that the looting issue was grounded in the relationship of the temple and its surrounding communities.

Despite increased security, Ok Sophon said, his team found 100 holes around the site dug by hopeful antiquities hunters. On one occasion, police tracked down five men seen taking material from the site.

The Heritage Watch project will focus on Guide Training, language training and promotion of Banteay Chmar as a tourist destination and the organization will work closely with the Community Based Tourism Organization in this initiative.
 
Cambodia gains permanent seat on World Heritage Committee
Xinhua news agency reported that Cambodia's Prime Minister, Samdech Hun Sen, on Tuesday expressed his pleasure as Cambodia became a permanent member of the World Heritage Committee (WHC) of UNESCO at the 17th general assembly in France.

“It is a proud moment for our country as Cambodia becomes a   permanent member of the world heritage committee,” Hun Sen told over 2,000 students in graduation ceremony of a university in Phnom Penh. “It will promote the image and prestige of the Kingdom of Cambodia on the world arena,” he added.

On behalf of new permanent member of the WHC, Cambodia will implement its mission with high responsibility and will strengthen the cooperation with other countries, he said.

 


Page 3 of 16
"...the most effective measure now would be to sign more bilateral agreements with countries that are under assault from the antiquities trade..." - Roger Atwood.
hft

hft

hft

LP and Frommers

Who's Online

We have 179 guests online

Latest comments

Support Heritage Watch

Subscribe by Email!

Receive the latest updates about the fight to help protect Cambodia's heritage!
Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Supporters of Heritage Watch

Journey into the heart of history... FRIENDS OF KHMER CULTURE, Inc.

Contact Us






Syndication

Feed Entries