[CPProt.net] History lost in dust of war-torn Iraq
Museum Security Network / Cultural Property Protection Net (Ton Cremers)
museum-security at museum-security.org
Wed Apr 27 08:15:42 CEST 2005
History lost in dust of war-torn Iraq
By Joanne Farchakh Bajjaly
Independent archaeologist and journalist
It is two years since looters ravaged one of the world's most important
museums, in central Baghdad.
Saddam Hussein's power had collapsed and the newly arrived US-led coalition
forces were unable to prevent a crime against history.
Professional smugglers connected to the international antiquities mafia
managed to break some of the sealed doors of the Baghdad Museum storage
rooms.
They looted priceless artefacts such as the museum's entire collection of
cylindrical seals and large numbers of Assyrian ivory carvings.
More than 15,000 objects were taken. Many were smuggled out of Iraq and
offered for sale.
To date, 3,000 have been recovered in Baghdad, some returned by ordinary
citizens, others by the police. In addition, more than 1,600 objects have
been seized in neighbouring countries, some 300 in Italy and more than 600
in the United States.
Most of the stolen items are unaccounted for, but some private collectors in
the Middle East and Europe have admitted possessing objects bearing the
initials IM (Iraq Museum inventory number).
Ancient sites levelled
An ever-growing number of websites also offer Mesopotamian artefacts -
anywhere up to 7,000 years old - for sale.
Doubtless, there are more fake objects advertised on the web than authentic
ones, but the mere existence of this market has fuelled the looting of
archaeological sites in southern Iraq.
The picture there is appalling. More than 150 Sumerian cities dating back to
the fourth millennium BC - such as Umma, Umm al-Akkareb, Larsa and Tello -
lie destroyed, turned into crater-filled landscapes of shredded pottery and
broken bricks.
If properly excavated, these cities - covering an estimated 20 sq km - could
help us learn about the development of the human race.
But the looters have destroyed ancient monuments, erasing the region's
history in a tireless search for a cylinder seal, a sculpture or a cuneiform
tablet that they can sell to a dealer for a few dollars.
It is tough, poorly paid work carried out by jobless Iraqis with no way of
earning a better income.
"A cylinder seal or a cuneiform tablet brings in under $50 on the site for
the looter," explains the archaeologist responsible for the district of
Nasiriya, Abdul Amir Hamadani.
"It's a disaster that we are all witnessing and observing, but which we can
do little to prevent. With the help of 200 newly recruited police officers
we are trying to stop the looting by patrolling the sites as often as
possible.
"But we are now all alone. Italian carabinieri troops were the only
coalition forces that actively worked on this issue for a few months. They
used to patrol the region by land and from the sky. They have stopped all
their operations and are now simply helping train policemen and guards."
Heavy boots
Coalition forces have themselves damaged archaeological sites by using them
as military bases.
The withdrawal of coalition troops from Babylon has revealed irreversible
damage to one of the seven wonders of the ancient world.
An alarming report by the keeper of the British Museum's Near East
department, Dr John Curtis, describes how areas in the middle of the
archaeological site were levelled to create a landing area for helicopters
and parking lots for heavy vehicles.
"They caused substantial damage to the Ishtar Gate, one of the most famous
monuments from antiquity," he wrote.
"US military vehicles crushed 2,600-year-old brick pavements, archaeological
fragments were scattered across the site, more then 12 trenches were driven
into ancient deposits and military earth-moving projects contaminated the
site for future generations of scientists.
"Add to all that the damage caused to nine of the moulded brick figures of
dragons in the Ishtar Gate by people trying to remove the bricks from the
wall."
There will be no end to the destruction of Iraq's heritage, unless the
country's leaders take a political decision to consider archaeology a
priority.
For this, the ring of dealers in Baghdad has to be seized, looting in the
south has to be effectively confronted and coalition forces have to be
prevented from setting up base on archaeological sites.
The longer Iraq finds itself in a state of war, the more the cradle of
civilization is threatened.
It may not even last long enough for our grandchildren to learn from.
Joanne Farchakh Bajjaly is an independent archaeologist and journalist
covering the Middle East, who has been studying Iraqi heritage for the last
seven years.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/world/middle_east/4461755.stm
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