[CPProt.net] Ethiopia may seek return of 19th-century child prince's body from Britain
Museum Security Network / Cultural Property Protection Net (Ton Cremers)
museum-security at museum-security.org
Sat Apr 23 07:18:08 CEST 2005
Ethiopia may seek return of 19th-century child prince's body from Britain
Saturday April 23rd, 2005.
ADDIS ABABA, April 22 (AFP) -- Ethiopia may soon demand the repatriation of
the remains of an 19th-century prince who died in Britain after being
spirited away by invading British troops, a senior official said Friday.
Encouraged by its success in winning the return from Italy of the stolen
third-century BC Axum obelisk, Ethiopia is hoping other European countries
will send back similarly plundered pieces of its heritage, including the
body of the prince, the official said.
"Prince Alemayu is still in Great Britain," Deputy Information Minister
Netsannet Asfaw said. "I would like to get the body back."
She said she was not making an official request but felt it was now time for
the prince, who was taken to Britain at the age of eight in 1868 after the
overthrow of his father emperor Theodor of Ethiopia, to come home.
"As a mother, I think he should come home," she said. "He was a child when
he died and he was far away from his country."
Prince Alemayu was taken to London by British troops after they had sacked
the country's old capital of Maqdala and overthrown emperor Theodor who
committed suicide to avoid being taken captive.
He contracted pneumonia and died in 1878 and was buried in Windsor Castle
where his body still lies.
Netsannet said Ethiopians, who are currently celebrating the return of the
Axum obelisk -- the third and final piece of which is to be flown back the
country from Rome on Monday -- should be equally concerned about the prince.
"People give a lot of importance to artefacts, but in this case it is a
human being," she said.
Richard Pankhurst, a leading scholar on Ethiopian history in Addis Ababa,
said during his time in Britain, Alemayu had frequently expressed a desire
to return home but was refused.
"He wanted to come back to Ethiopia, but the British government didn't
encourage him to do so," he said, adding that bringing back the remains
would be "a continuation of his own wish to come back."
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