Statement on vandalisation of National Museum in Baghdad |
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HEINOUS CRIME AGAINST THE WORLD'S CULTURAL HERITAGE - THE COALITION'S DESTRUCTION OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF ANTIQUITIES, BAGHDAD Iraq has often been called the cradle of civilization. Even the most Eurocentric of historians have had little hesitation in tracing the cultural genealogy of Europe back to Iraq (Mesopotamia) through the debt But no longer: the "Coalition Forces" led by the US, have willfully ensured its destruction. The policy of encouraging looting of civil and public property with a view to secure an element of support from The ransacking of the National Museum by armed looters began on 10 March soon after the Iraqi forces had been driven out of the area of Baghdad where the Museum is located. Despite the presence of US tanks in the vicinity, the looting continued for two days unchecked till, it is reported, little that is valuable was left. Such museum officials, attendants and archaeologists as tried to prevent the looting were |
were caught by surprise. Even before the invasion began, the American Association of Museum Art Director, the American Council for Cultural Policy and the Archaeological Institute of America issued statements calling on the US to protect cultural sites in Iraq during the impending war. McGuire Gibson of the University of Chicago told Washington Post that he and other concerned specialists had repeatedly requested the Pentagon to prevent harm to the National Museum and other collections; but the pleas of the scholars fell on deaf ears. The US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld, responding to the news of the National Museum's destruction, put his philosophy pithily in one sentence: "Bad things happen in life, and people do loot." Ominously, a powerful dealers' lobby in the USA is already demanding that the much-trumpeted US law against sale of stolen cultural artefacts in US be waived with regard to Iraq, so as to enable the dealers to make profits out of the artefacts looted from the National Museum and other Museums and libraries in Iraq. The value of the loss cannot be fully estimated, even in terms of money. We are told the pieces lost include some of the great works of world art: a solid Sumerian gold harp, a sculptured woman's head from Uruk, both over 4000 years old; ancient jewellery of similar dates; cuneiform tablets containing unvaluable records of the past; friezes, tapestry, works of Islamic art. An Iraqi archaeologist, Raid Abdul Ridhar Muhammad, grieving over this organised destruction of Iraqs rich heritage, told New York Times "this is not a liberation, this is a humiliation" - for the Iraqi people. Perhaps, this is what the attempt has throughout been: to destroy the Iraqi people's sense of national dignity and force them into utter subjection. What has happened to the National Museum in Baghdad is, however, not only a crime against the people of Iraq; it is a crime against the whole of humanity, since the great heritage of Iraq is also a precious part of SAHMAT calls upon all people, especially, historians, archaeologists, artists, literary persons, and lovers of cultural heritage, to join in the world-wide protest against this heinous act. It is time that UNESCO
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