[MSN] Italy ready to cut ties in row with Getty museum.
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Wed Dec 20 20:37:01 CET 2006
Italy ready to cut ties in row with Getty museum
Wed Dec 20, 2006 9:40 PM IST
By Phil Stewart
ROME (Reuters) - Italy said on Wednesday it was ready to break off ties with
the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles unless it agrees quickly to return
art works that Rome says were looted.
Culture Minister Francesco Rutelli said he was tired of stop-go talks and
was making a final call to the Getty, one of the world's richest museums.
"Either there is an agreement or there is a breakdown," he told reporters in
Rome. "The time has passed when people could turn a blind eye to looting."
Getty director Michael Brand told Rutelli last month that his museum would
return 26 of 46 pieces that Italy wants back.
Rutelli, showing photographs he said proved the works were looted,
reiterated that the offer was unacceptable. "That would be saying 'yes' to
international trafficking," he said.
Rome has insisted the Getty return a prized bronze sculpture called the
"Statue of a Victorious Youth" and a limestone and marble statue of the
Greek goddess Aphrodite.
In its letter last month, the Getty said it would not hand over the
2,500-year-old sculpture because it was found in international waters in
1964. The museum said evidence on the Aphrodite piece was inconclusive.
Rutelli did not say what measures he might take if the Getty did not agree
to Rome's demands. Maurizio Fiorilli, a lawyer representing the Culture
Ministry, said a complete break with the Getty would probably put an end to
joint scientific work, scholarships and Italian loans of art work to the
museum.
A cut-off could hurt Italy more than the Getty, which since the 1980s has
lent Italy more than 80 objects, twice as many as Italy has sent to the
museum.
The Getty case is complicated by the trial in Rome of former curator Marion
True, accused of conspiracy in trafficking stolen Italian antiquities. A
Greek prosecutor has charged True with illegally buying a 4th-century golden
wreath smuggled out of Greece 13 years ago. True has denied any wrongdoing.
Italy's campaign to recover looted antiquities has led to agreements with
other U.S. institutions such as the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York
and the Boston Museum of Fine Arts.
http://in.today.reuters.com/
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