National Post

Tablet apps

ISIL using Whatsapp, Facebook and eBay to auction off looted antiquitie­s.

- By Sangwon Yoon

The WhatsApp message appeared on his iPhone: photos of an ancient Mesopotami­an vase worth $250,000, part of a highly valued set, waiting to be extracted.

The recipient, Amr Al Azm, replied that he was interested. How to proceed? A message from a different account followed. The vase could be smuggled through Lebanon.

Al Azm, an anthropolo­gy professor in Ohio, was faking it, as he does when photos of looted antiquitie­s are sent to him in the belief that he is a collector or dealer. He is a detective — self-appointed — hoping to save some of mankind’s rarest and most vulnerable artifacts by tracking the burgeoning antiquitie­s trade of Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant in Iraq and Syria.

The world went into shock earlier this year after ISIL released videos of its bearded operatives smashing ancient artworks with sledgehamm­ers and drills. But after U.S.-led airstrikes on refineries and tankers reduced the group’s US$1 million daily oil revenue by nearly two-thirds, the razing gave way to looting for sale via eBay, Facebook and WhatsApp.

The self-declared caliphate is now a growing player in the US$3 billion global antiquitie­s market. Willingly or not, buyers are filling the extremists’ coffers.

“Islamic State operates like a diversifie­d criminal business,” Louise Shelley, author of Dirty Entangleme­nts: Corruption, Crime and Terrorism, said by phone from Turkey. “They think like business people.”

The group’s fundraisin­g structure has rapidly evolved from collecting a 20 per cent tax from diggers and dealers operating on their territory to running their own digs and trades.

Al Azm, who teaches at Shawnee State University and is chair of the Syrian op- position’s Syrian Heritage Task Force, says that in recent months, the group has set up a government branch, chillingly known as the archaeolog­ical administra­tion, in the Syrian city of Manbij near the Turkish border, which manages loots and sales.

“They bring in their own trucks, their own bulldozers, hire their own work crews and pay them salaries,” he said.

Islamic State acts as a supplier for a complex chain involving at least five brokers and dealers, said Michael Danti, an adviser to the U.S. State Department on plundered antiquitie­s from Iraq and Syria.

The extremists are closely linked to Turkish crime networks in the border towns of Gaziantep or Akcakale, he said. Once the artifacts are smuggled into Turkey, a broker will cash them for resale to dealers who have pockets deep enough to pay for storage and wait up to 15 years to sell, when law enforcemen­t is less focused on them.

Archaeolog­ists estimate that as much as US$300 million worth of antiquitie­s are now flooding the market through Turkey, Lebanon and Jordan as part of ISIL’s transactio­ns.

Danti, a professor of archeology at Boston University, said he has seen a spike in the number of uploaded photos of cuneiform tablets and antique stamp seals. Some are fake, including Greco-Roman coins manufactur­ed by a Romanian crime ring.

The U. S. Internatio­nal Trade Commission reported that between 2012 and 2013 when Islamic State expanded its reach, American import of declared antiquitie­s from Iraq increased by 672 per cent and those from Syria by 133 per cent.

James McAndrew, who worked for 27 years for U.S. Customs and Department of Homeland Security, said nonetheles­s he doesn’t expect major artifacts looted by Islamic State to emerge in New York, London and Geneva for at least a decade.

“Shady dealers sit on smuggled items for years to launder the provenance before trying to sell them for lump sums,” McAndrew said. “There’s enough awareness among major auction houses such as Sotheby’s and Christie’s to avoid handling any antiquity believed to be from Iraq or Syria.

“But the challenge is mon- itoring private sales, which are driving the global antiquitie­s market,” McAndrew said. “I’m pretty confident those pieces from Iraq and Syria are being sold to locals in the region — wealthy Saudis, Emiratis, Iranians.”

One concern is that the items may end up in freeports, which are tax-free storage spaces at internatio­nal airports that do not require passage through customs.

“The best way to stop this is by intercepti­ng the items before they end up in the freeports,” said Daniel Brazier of Homeland Security, adding that freeport search warrants are near impossible to obtain.

As part of that effort, the United Nations Security Council adopted a resolution banning the sale of antiquitie­s from Syria and Iraq, and earlier this month, the U.S. House of Representa­tives passed legislatio­n making it illegal to sell looted artifacts from Syria.

Some are demanding military action or at least some kind of internatio­nal protective force. Italian Foreign Minister Paolo Gentiloni proposed creating “blue helmets of culture” to protect heritage sites when conflicts or disasters break out. Irina Bokova, director-general of UNESCO, called for the creation of “protected cultural zones.”

Experts like Danti of Boston University say there is no way to stop this campaign without physical interventi­on. At the least, he said, borders need to be secured to stop the outflow.

“If we can hold the material inside Syria and Iraq, ISIL can’t get the money for it and it will make it easier for the world to repatriate the antiquitie­s when the conflict ends,” he said.

Until then, academics and art experts are working on an inventory of cultural goods that need to be protected from illicit traffickin­g, “red lists” collated by the Internatio­nal Council of Museums and the ArtClaim database managed by the London-based Art Recovery Internatio­nal.

Deborah Lehr, chairwoman of the Antiquitie­s Coalition, told UN diplomats on June 4 that Archaeolog­ists Without Borders will be created by September to centralize efforts.

Christophe­r Marinello, chief executive of Art Recovery, spent more than 20 years recapturin­g Nazi-looted art and thinks this battle can be won.

“Any terrorist organizati­on or rogue state, even going back to the Nazis, who are looting and traffickin­g art, are looking for quick cash,” said Marinello. “The ultimate destinatio­n for valuable antiquitie­s is the West, and people here are more aware now than they were in the 20th century.”

Others are far more pessimisti­c. Al Azm said re-establishi­ng rule of law is fundamenta­l to combating exploitati­on of cultural heritage and there is no sign of that.

“The traffickin­g industry in Iraq and Syria is like what Hollywood is for Los Angeles,” he said. “Just like everyone is an aspiring actor in L.A., everyone in Syria and Iraq is a dealer in some trafficked goods. The people won’t stop hustling until the war ends.”

Islamic State operates like a diversifie­d criminal business

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 ?? The Associat ed Press ?? A militant hammers away at a face on a wall in Hatra, Iraq. Hatra is a large fortified city recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage site. ISIL is now a growing player in the US$3 billion global antiquitie­s market.
The Associat ed Press A militant hammers away at a face on a wall in Hatra, Iraq. Hatra is a large fortified city recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage site. ISIL is now a growing player in the US$3 billion global antiquitie­s market.

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