FG Launches Campaign To Repatriate Looted/Smuggled Artifacts

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The Federal Government has launched the Campaign For The Return and

Restitution of Nigeria’s Looted and Smuggled Artifacts from around the

world.

 

The Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, launched

the campaign at a press conference in Lagos on Thursday.

 

“With this announcement, we are putting on notice all those who are

holding on to Nigeria’s cultural property anywhere in the world that

we are coming for them, using all legal and diplomatic instruments

available. Gentlemen, we are under no illusion that this will be an

easy task, but no one should also doubt our determination to make a

success of this campaign,” he said.

 

Alhaji Mohammed said Nigeria cannot imagine by what logic an Ife

Bronze or a Benin Bronze or a Nok Terracotta can belong to any other

part of the globe except to the people of Nigeria, whose ancestors

made them.

 

“We have never laid claim to the Mona Lisa or a Rembrandt. Those who

looted our heritage resources, especially during the 19th century

wars, or those who smuggled them out of the country for pecuniary

reasons, have simply encouraged the impoverishment of our heritage and

stealing of our past,” he said..

 

The Minister said these timeless and priceless pieces of work are an

important part of the nation’s past, its history, and heritage

resource, and that allowing them to sit in the museums of other

nations robs Nigeria of our history.

 

He said in its quest to diversify the economy by leveraging on the

culture and tourism sector, the government considers these priceless

artifacts as critical components of the diversification drive.

 

Alhaji Mohammed said in launching the campaign, Nigeria is emboldened

by Article 4 of the UNESCO 1970 Convention, to which most nations

subscribe, which identifies the categories of cultural property that

form part of the cultural heritage of each member state, thereby

belonging to that State.

 

He said by the provisions of the Article, they include cultural

property created by the individual or collective genius of nationals

of the State concerned, and cultural property which has been the

subject of a freely agreed exchange or received as a gift or purchased

legally with the consent of the competent authorities of the country

of origin of such property.

 

The Minister also said the Heads of State and Government of the ECOWAS

Region met in December 2018 in Abuja and adopted a Political

Declaration on the return of cultural property to their countries of

origin, adding: ”We are bound by this Declaration, which has further

brought discussions towards a Plan of Action.”

 

He called on every museum and person holding on to the nation’s

heritage resources anywhere in the world to initiate dialogue with the

federal government, saying: ”We urge them to identify what is in

their collections, transparently make them public, approach us for

discussion on terms of return and restitution, as well as circulation

and loans. They must acknowledge that ownership

resides in us. They must be ready to sign agreements and Memoranda of

Understanding in this regard, and they must be ready to release some

of these antiquities for immediate return to Nigeria.”

 

He said the government will kick-start the campaign with a quest to

retrieve the Ife Broze Head, which was one of the items stolen in 1987

when one of the country’s national museums was broken into.

 

”After it was brought to an auction in London two years ago, the

auction house observed that it was an Ife Bronze Head which belongs to

the ICOM (International Council of Museums) Red List of cultural goods

that are deemed to be the most vulnerable to illicit traffic.

 

”Now, the London Metropolitan police has seized the object, and it

has invited Nigeria to make a claim, otherwise they will have to

return it to the fellow claiming ownership. We have now started work

on the return of the Ife Bronze head to Nigeria.,” the Minister said.

 

Meanwhile, the Federal Government has expressed delight at the

decision of the Cambridge University’s Jesus College to repatriate a

Benin Bronze Cockerel, known as ”okukor”, to Nigeria.

 

”Considering the hundreds of Benin Bronzes looted during that

occupation, the decision to return the cockerel is like a drop in the

ocean, but it is an important drop and we welcome it,” the Minister

said.

 

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