|
Iraq says IS demolishes ruins
to cover up looting operations
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
BAGHDAD (AP) -- The videos of Islamic State militants
destroying ancient artifacts in Iraq's museums and blowing up 3,000-year-old
temples are chilling enough, but one of Iraq's top antiquities officials is now
saying the destruction is a cover for an even more sinister activity - the
systematic looting of Iraq's cultural heritage.
In the videos that appeared in April, militants can be seen
taking sledge hammers to the iconic winged-bulls of Assyria and sawing apart
floral reliefs in the palace of Ashurnasirpal II in Nimrud before the entire
site is destroyed with explosives. But according to Qais Hussein Rashid, head of
Iraq's State Board for Antiquities and Heritage, that was just the final step in
a deeper game.
"According to our sources, the Islamic State started days
before destroying this site by digging in this area, mainly the palace," he told
The Associated Press from his office next to Iraq's National Museum - itself a
target of looting after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion that ousted Saddam Hussein.
"We think that they first started digging around these areas to get the
artifacts, then they started demolishing them as a cover up."
While there is no firm evidence of the amount of money being
made by the Islamic State group from looting antiquities, satellite photos and
anecdotal evidence confirm widespread plundering of archaeological sites in
areas under IS control.
Nimrud was also the site of one of the greatest discoveries
in Iraqi history, stunning golden jewelry from a royal tomb found in 1989, and
Rashid is worried that more such tombs lie beneath the site and have been
plundered. He estimated the potential income from looting to be in the millions
of dollars.
Experts speculate that the large pieces are destroyed with
sledgehammers and drills for the benefit of the cameras, while the more portable
items like figurines, masks and ancient clay cuneiform tablets are smuggled to
dealers in Turkey.
On Wednesday, Egypt, together with the Antiquities Coalition
and the Washington-based Middle East Institute will be holding a conference in
Cairo entitled "Cultural Property Under Threat" to come up with regional
solutions to the plundering and sale of antiquities.
This isn't the first time, of course, that Iraq's
antiquities have fallen victim to current events. There was the infamous looting
of the museum in 2003 and reports of widespread plundering of archaeological
sites in the subsequent years, especially in the south. U.S. investigators at
the time said al-Qaida was funding its activities with illicit sales of
antiquities.
What appears to be different this time is the sheer scale
and systematic nature of the looting, especially in the parts of Syria
controlled by the Islamic State group. Satellite photos show some sites so
riddled with holes they look like a moonscape.
The G-7's Financial Action Task Force said in a February
report that the Islamic State group is making money both by selling artifacts
directly - as probably would be the case with material taken from the museums -
or by taxing criminal gangs that dig at the sites in their territory. After oil
sales, extortion and kidnapping, antiquities sales are believed to be one of the
group's main sources of funding.
In February, the United Nations passed a resolution
recognizing that the Islamic State group was "generating income from the direct
or indirect trade," in stolen artifacts, and added a ban on the illicit sale of
Syrian antiquities to the already existing one on Iraqi artifacts passed in
2003.
While Iraq contains remains from civilizations dating back
more than 5,000 years, the hardest hit artifacts have come from the Assyrian
empire, which at its height in 700 B.C. stretched from Iran to the Mediterranean
and whose ancient core almost exactly covers the area now controlled by the
Islamic State group.
The looted artifacts most likely follow the traditional
smuggling routes for all sorts of illicit goods into Turkey, according to Lynda
Albertson, head of the Association for Research into Crimes Against Art. From
there, the most common route is through Bulgaria and the Balkans into Western
Europe. Britain and the United States remain the biggest markets for
antiquities, though wealthy collectors are emerging in China and the Gulf -
especially for Islamic-era artifacts.
International bans make the ultimate sale of illicit
antiquities difficult, but not impossible. So far, there have been no reports of
major, museum-quality pieces from IS-held territory appearing in auction houses,
so the artifacts must be going to either private collectors or they are being
hoarded by dealers to be slowly and discretely released onto the market, said
Patty Gerstenblith, Director of the Center for Art, Museum and Cultural Heritage
Law at DePaul University.
"I do believe that dealers are willing to warehouse items
for a long time and that they may be receiving some `financing' to do this from
well-heeled collectors or other dealers operating outside of the Middle East,"
she said. "It is relatively unlikely that a major piece would be plausibly sold
on the open market with a story that it was in a private collection for a long
period of time."
Mesopotamian sculptures, jewelry and stelae sold legally
have commanded stunning sums, up to $1 million in some cases, but the looters
would be selling them to dealers for a fraction of that cost - with the profit
margin coming from the sheer number of artifacts being sold.
Iraq has sent lists to the International Council of Museums,
the U.N. and Interpol detailing all the artifacts that might have been looted
from the museum in Mosul, Iraq's second-largest city overrun by IS last June.
Harder to stop, however, is the sale of never-before-seen pieces that have been
newly dug up and never registered.
There is new legislation going through the U.S. Congress to
tighten controls on illicit trafficking of materials from the Middle East,
though Albertson contends that the laws are less important than the manpower
devoted to enforcing them.
"A new resolution is just another well-intentioned piece of
ineffective paper," she said.
The Iraqi government is now rushing to document the
remaining sites in the country, especially in the disputed province of
Salahuddin, just south of the Islamic State stronghold in Nineweh province.
Nineweh itself is home to 1,700 archaeological sites, all under IS control, said
Rashid of the antiquities department.
As a number of experts point out, though, most sites in Iraq
have not been completely excavated and there are likely more winged bull statues
and stelae waiting to be found under the earthen mounds scattered throughout
this country - assuming the Islamic State group and its diggers don't find them
first.
-----
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
World News: Africa News: Health: Humour: Science and Technology: Education: Fashion: General Entertainment: News and Politics: Paranormal Science: Religion: Music and General Information: Crime and Law: Hobby and Recreation; Military: Movies and TV: Photography.
Playboy in Bedroom Calamity
Morgan Advert
Tuesday, 12 May 2015
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Share
Comments
Widget is loading comments...

No comments:
Post a Comment