The Federal Government has launched a
campaign for the return and restitution of Nigeria’s looted and smuggled
artefacts from around the world.
The Minister of Information and
Culture, Lai Mohammed, in a statement issued by his Special Assistant
(Media), Segun Adeyemi, launched the campaign at a briefing held in
Lagos on Thursday.
Mohammed disclosed that the London
Metropolitan Police had seized the Ife Bronze Head and invited Nigeria
to make a claim or they would have to return the artefact to the person
claiming ownership of it.
The minister also said the Federal
Government would begin the campaign with a quest to retrieve the bronze
head, which was one of the items stolen when one of the country’s
national museums was burgled in 1987.
He said, ‘’After it was
brought to an auction in London two years ago, the auction house
observed that it was an Ife Bronze Head, which belongs to the
International Council of Museums Red List of cultural goods deemed to be
most vulnerable to illicit traffic.
‘’Now, the London
Metropolitan Police have seized the object and invited Nigeria to make a
claim, otherwise they will have to return it to the fellow claiming
ownership. We have now started work on the return of the Ife Bronze Head
to Nigeria.”
Mohammed added that in launching the campaign,
Nigeria had become emboldened by Article 4 of the UNESCO 1970
Convention, to which most countries around the world subscribe and
which identifies the categories of cultural property that form part of
the cultural heritage of each member state.
He said that by the
provisions of the Article, they include cultural property created by the
individual or collective genius of nationals of the State concerned,
and cultural property that has been the subject of a freely agreed
exchange or received as a gift or purchased legally with the consent of
the competent authorities of the country of origin of such property.
The
minister said, “With this announcement, we are putting on notice all
those who are holding on to Nigeria’s cultural property anywhere in the
world that
we are coming for them, using all legal and diplomatic instruments available.
“Gentlemen,
we are under no illusion that this will be an easy task, but no one
should also doubt our determination to make a success of this campaign.”
The
Minister added that it was impossible to imagine by what logic an Ife
Bronze or a Benin Bronze or a Nok Terracotta could belong to any other
part of the globe, except to the people of Nigeria, whose ancestors made
them.
“We have never laid claim to the Mona Lisa or a Rembrandt.
Those who looted our heritage resources, especially during the 19th
century wars, or those who smuggled them out of the country for
pecuniary reasons, have simply encouraged the impoverishment of our
heritage and stealing of our past.
“These timeless and priceless
pieces of art work were an important part of the nation’s past, its
history, and heritage resource. Allowing them to sit in the museums of
other nations robs Nigeria of our history.”
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