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Re: [casi] "US plans to loot Iraqi antiquities"



fyi-

This newly hatched "American Council for Cultural Policy" (ACCP) is the
brainchild of an American  art attorney, Ashton Hawkins.  From Art News:

"Ashton Hawkins Forced Out As Chairman of DIA
Trustees of the Dia Center threatened to withhold donations unless longtime
chairman Ashton Hawkins, who is also vice president and counsel to the
trustees for the Metropolitan, agreed to step down. Younger trustees, allied
with director Michael Govan, were dissatisfied with Mr. Hawkins because of
the center's operating deficit. Dia is in the first phase of a capital
campaign and several large donations were promised on the condition of his
departure...(SOURCE: Roberta Smith, New York Times, 12/23/95, p. 13).

Ashton Hawkins re-emerges,
http://tinyurl.com/9dq8
The Art Newspaper.com

"The future of Iraq's heritage"

The American Council for Cultural Policy takes no position on whether or not
the US should invade Iraq, but the group is offering assistance in an
eventual rebuilding of Iraq's cultural institutions.

Founded by former Metropolitan Museum of Art lawyer Ashton Hawkins, the ACCP
is also asking other groups to join it in its efforts.

The ACCP talks about working with the Iraqi Antiquities Service to rebuild
cultural institutions after any new invasion. The Antiquities Service lost
one generation in the 10-year Iran-Iraq War of the 1980s and another to the
purges and scarcity of the 1990s. But Saddam Hussein does see the
nationalistic benefits of an antiquities policy, and has been funding the
department more generously in recent years. US archaeologists see restoring
control of cultural sites to Iraqi specialists as a sign of US willingness
to allow at least some autonomy for a conquered nation that George Bush says
needs "de-nazification". ...

More..

http://www.artforum.com/news/week=200315

UNESCO has asked the US military to spare archaeological sites in the war on
Iraq, but bombs may not be the only threat to the country's cultural
heritage. As the Süddeutsche Zeitung's Sonja Zekri reports, the period after
the war could see more significant losses in the form of plundering.

As Zekri reports, at the close of the first Gulf War, crowds rummaged
through Iraq's museums, either destroying works or stealing them to sell on
the black market. This time around, the plundering may simply be legalized
by a US-backed regime.

Citing an article in the review Science, Zekri reports that a group of sixty
American art dealers, lawyers, researchers, and museum directors formed the
American Council for Cultural Policy last year to defend the interests of
private and institutional collectors. "Their goal is to loosen up the Iraqi
antiquities laws under an American-controlled postwar regime," writes Zekri.
"In short, it's the legalized plundering of Mesopotamian culture by
Americans after US bombs have already destroyed the land, and US companies
have profited from reconstruction."

According to the council's treasurer, William Pearlstein, who was
interviewed by Science, the group supports a "reasonable post-Saddam
administration for culture" with new laws that would permit "some objects to
be certified for export."

Ashton Hawkins, the council's president and a former executive
vice-president of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, denies that
the council is attempting to change laws and adds that antiquities are not
the organization's primary focus.

The Archaeological Institute of America's Patty Gerstenblith is not
convinced. "The stated goal of the council is to make countries with rich
archaeological resources relax their antiquities-export laws while
encouraging the United States to loosen its laws on importing cultural
objects," Gerstenblith told the Süddeutsche Zeitung.

For Hawkins, the practice of keeping archaeological finds in the country is
"retentionist." He believes that newly discovered objects should be bought
from "local people at local prices" in order to avoid plundering and export
to international black markets.

"Poor countries with rich history sell their cultural heritage to rich lands
with better researchers and nicer museums," concludes Zekri. "Even if the
council does not succeed in influencing the Iraqi laws, a 'power, money, and
conquest' strategy is clearly visible here."
-Jennifer Allen

Do please keep on the case.  pg





----- Original Message -----
From: "Dirk Adriaensens" <dirk.adriaensens@skynet.be>
To: <bob.steel1@juno.com>; "discussion list Discussion CASI"
<casi-discuss@lists.casi.org.uk>
Sent: Saturday, April 12, 2003 5:29 AM
Subject: Re: [casi] "US plans to loot Iraqi antiquities"



[ Presenting plain-text part of multi-format email ]

Dear list,
this aggression is getting worse. Whatever US/UK-media and Bush & Blair may
tell us. The inevitable has happend. One of the most famous archeological
museums in the world has been looted. And surely these people know very well
to who they can sell the stolen artefacts. Now this aggression is not only
depriving the Iraqi's from the right to live, their culture is also being
stolen. It will be replaced by McDonalds and Coca-Cola. How much lower can
the US/UK barbarians sink?
We're back in the dark ages of the conquistadores.
Resistance against this fourth Reich is necessary. How do we explain this to
our children? What kind of world do we leave for them, if all this is
possible?
Greetings (from a very sad)
Dirk.
Baghdad archeological museum looted
A Baghdad mob looted Iraq's largest archeological museum amid a breakdown in
civil authority following the collapse of Saddam Hussein's regime, an AFP
reporter said.

A dozen looters helped themselves in ground floor rooms at the National
Museum of Iraq, where pottery artefacts and statues were seen broken or
overturned, while administrative offices were wrecked.

Two men were seen hauling an ancient portal out of the building, and empty
wooden crates were scattered over the floor.

Upstairs rooms seemed to have been spared for the time being.

Iraq, among the earliest cradles of civilisation and home to the remains of
such ancient Mesopotamian cities as Babylon, Ur and Nineveh, has one of the
richest archaeological heritages in the world.

The museum housed a major collection of antiquities, including a
4,000-year-old silver harp from Ur.

International cultural organisations had urged that the archeological
heritage of Iraq, one of the cradles of civilisation, be spared ahead of the
US-led war launched on March 20.

>
> US plans to loot Iraqi antiques
> ================================
> 07.04.2003
> [08:33]
>
> FEARS that Iraq's heritage will face widespread looting
> at the end of the Gulf war have been heightened after a
> group of wealthy art dealers secured a high-level
> meeting with the US administration.
>
> It has emerged that a coalition of antiquities
> collectors and arts lawyers, calling itself the
> American Council for Cultural Policy (ACCP), met with
> US defence and state department officials prior to the
> start of military action to offer its assistance in
> preserving the country's invaluable archaeological
> collections.
>
> The group is known to consist of a number of
> influential dealers who favour a relaxation of Iraq's
> tight restrictions on the ownership and export of
> antiquities. Its treasurer, William Pearlstein, has
> described Iraq's laws as 'retentionist' and has said he
> would support a post-war government that would make it
> easier to have antiquities dispersed to the US.
>
> Before the Gulf war, a main strand of the ACCP's
> campaigning has been to persuade its government to
> revise the Cultural Property Implementation Act in
> order to minimise efforts by foreign nations to block
> the import into the US of objects, particularly
> antiques.
>
> News of the group's meeting with the government has
> alarmed scientists and archaeologists who fear the ACCP
> is working to a hidden agenda that will see the US
> authorities ease restrictions on the movement of Iraqi
> artefacts after a coalition victory in Iraq.
>
> Professor Lord Renfrew of Kaimsthorn, leading Cambridge
> archaeologist and director of the McDonald Institute
> for Archaeological Research, said: 'Iraqi antiquities
> legislation protects Iraq. The last thing one needs is
> some group of dealer-connected Americans interfering.
> Any change to those laws would be absolutely monstrous.
> '
>
> A wave of protest has also come from the Archaeological
> Institute of America (AIA), which says any weakening of
> Iraq's strict antiquities laws would be 'disastrous'.
> President Patty Gerstenblith said: 'The ACCP's agenda
> is to encourage the collecting of antiquities through
> weakening the laws of archaeologically-rich nations and
> eliminate national ownership of antiquities to allow
> for easier export. '
>
> The ACCP has caused deep unease among archaeologists
> since its creation in 2001. Among its main members are
> collectors and lawyers with chequered histories in
> collecting valuable artefacts, including alleged
> exhibitions of Nazi loot.
>
> They denied accusations of attempting to change Iraq's
> treatment of archaeological objects. Instead, they said
> at the January meeting they offered 'post-war technical
> and financial assistance', and 'conservation support'.
>
> Liam McDougall/Sunday Herald
>
> Web address     : <http://www.yahoogroups.com/group/portside>
>
> --------- End forwarded message ----------
>
>
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>



_______________________________________________
Sent via the discussion list of the Campaign Against Sanctions on Iraq.
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All postings are archived on CASI's website: http://www.casi.org.uk


_______________________________________________
Sent via the discussion list of the Campaign Against Sanctions on Iraq.
To unsubscribe, visit http://lists.casi.org.uk/mailman/listinfo/casi-discuss
To contact the list manager, email casi-discuss-admin@lists.casi.org.uk
All postings are archived on CASI's website: http://www.casi.org.uk


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