[MSN] Rome's ancient monuments are so poorly guarded that tourists are taking away mementos of their visit to the Eternal City with impunity.
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Mon Apr 7 06:20:35 CEST 2008
Tourists 'stripping ancient Rome bare'
By Malcolm Moore in Rome
Last Updated: 1:45am BST 03/04/2008
Rome's ancient monuments are so poorly guarded that tourists are taking away
mementos of their visit to the Eternal City with impunity.
Your view: Is tourism a blessing or a curse?
Archaeologists said yesterday that Trajan's Forum, in the heart of the
city's classical ruins, had been stripped of all the fragments of statues
and shards of amphorae that adorned the site until recently.
To highlight the problem, a reporter from Il Messaggero newspaper carried
away large boxes full of ancient artefacts during the daytime without being
challenged.
An archaeologist working at the site, who asked not to be named, said:
"Everything has been taken from Trajan's Forum. The close-circuit television
cameras are pointless, and the gates are practically non-existent. Even a
child could climb over them.
"The treasures of ancient Rome are very vulnerable, but there are lots of
gaps in the security system of one of the most important archaeological
areas in the world." He added that he had often seen people in restricted
areas, collecting keepsakes.
The newspaper blamed the 20 million tourists who pass through the city each
year for the looting. "Who knows how many of these small fragments now adorn
living rooms all over the world?" it said.
The forum was built in AD 112, followed by Trajan's Column in the following
year. The whole area is currently undergoing reconstruction, including the
insertion of a raised walkway for tourists.
"This is an open-air museum," said Eugenio La Rocca, the head of Rome's
cultural heritage authority.
"You have to bear in mind that we cannot cover every angle, especially since
restoration work is going on. We cannot put bunkers of guards everywhere. If
we did the whole of Rome would be a giant bunker.
"However, the area is closed off and the television monitoring system is
connected to a cabin staffed by guards. It is also connected to the police."
Mr La Rocca said the most valuable artefacts were fully catalogued and
carefully stored away in warehouses.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/
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http://www.museum-security.org
http://www.museumbeveiliging.com
http://www.handboekveiligheidszorgmusea.nl
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