[CPProt.net] Egypt: 7 Convicted in Antiquities Smuggling Trial

MSN CPPnet (Ton Cremers) museum-security at museum-security.org
Sun Aug 14 09:41:57 CEST 2005


 7 Convicted in Antiquities Smuggling Trial
   
By MARIAM FAM
Associated Press Writer

August 13, 2005, 9:10 PM EDT

CAIRO, Egypt -- The former director of a national antiquities department was
among three men sentenced to life in prison Saturday, after being convicted
in a scam that smuggled thousands of antiquities out of Egypt. 

Abdel Karim Abu Shanab, who headed the government office that inspects the
collections of antiquities traders, was accused of taking bribes and
supplying smugglers with certificates that said genuine antiquities were
fakes. Under Egyptian law, only fake antiquities can be exported. 

A total of 10 people were on trial in one of Egypt's biggest antiquity fraud
cases. Three were acquitted. 

According to court documents, Abu Shanab was sentenced to life imprisonment
for stealing records from the Supreme Council of Antiquities and helping
smuggle antiquities, and received a lighter sentence of 15 years for other
charges to be served concurrently. A life sentence in Egypt equals 25 years.


Other defendants also received multiple sentences, in one instance adding up
to 55 years, but will only stay in prison for the duration of the single
longest sentence. 

"This is injustice. I have done nothing," Abu Shanab said after the verdict.
His lawyer said they would appeal. 

The six other convicted defendants received sentences ranging from life
imprisonment to 15 years in prison as well as fines. 

Former antiquities official Salah Eddin Ramadan gasped with relief when he
heard he was among three defendants found not guilty. 

"I cannot pull myself together," he said, shaking in the caged dock. "Thank
God. I know I'm innocent." 

Zahi Hawass, the council's secretary general, praised the verdict. 

"This is an important step toward protecting Egypt's antiquities from being
looted by gangs," he said. 

The accused were part of a group that officials believe has stolen about
57,000 artifacts from state warehouses and smuggled thousands of them
abroad. Police found coins, statues and sarcophaguses in tunnels under the
villas of three relatives -- businessmen who were convicted in an earlier
trial. The cache allegedly included certificates signed by Abu Shanab. 

Egypt has drastically stepped up efforts in recent years to stop trafficking
of its antiquities. It has warned foreign museums that it will not help them
mount exhibitions on the Pharaonic era unless they return smuggled
artifacts. 

http://www.newsday.com/




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