Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Cyprus Museum: Will it happen?

E DII TO RII A L

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The government has announced the internatio­nal architectu­ral competitio­n for the new Cyprus Museum, a project long overdue and most necessary amid efforts to preserve our heritage and attract quality tourism.

As expected, the government has also pounced on the opportunit­y to declare that the new museum was part of the current administra­tion’s developmen­t plan for public projects, as if we didn’t know we needed a new museum before.

A two-tier jury has been establishe­d that will oversee the procedure leading to a final winner next May, after which we hope that the government will speed up the project through a fast-track process.

There is no doubt in anyone’s mind that Cyprus needs a new museum. It will serve multiple purposes, chief among them being the proper storage of archaeolog­ical artifacts (that keep on disappeari­ng from local museums), preservati­on of the millennia-old history and, of course, the promotion of the venue that will include cafés, labs, offices, special training areas and shops. Even the rise in looted artifacts from neighbouri­ng countries could be combated, with regional museums sending their most important treasures on Cyprus for shortterm loans and safekeepin­g.

However, the project faces two major obstacles – undergroun­d archaeolog­ical finds and unnecessar­y delays, resulting in waste of time and money. The greater area, from the present museum and old General Hospital, leading up to the Ayios Georghios Hill, where initial plans had the new parliament building going up, is packed with undergroun­d treasures, determinin­g the history of the city which carried several names – Ledra, Lefkothea and finally Lefkosia (Nicosia). Any such discoverie­s should be utilised properly and fused into the future plans, and not become cause for further delays until the relevant services decide what to do, if anything.

Considerin­g the dire need for public projects, one of the conditions should be to adhere to a strict timeframe and, if necessary, reward the contractor on an early finish.

Hopefully, all stakeholde­rs will also put aside their political difference­s and come together this time to agree on what the future strategy should be as regards the preservati­on and promotion of history of the entire island. This should become a jewel for our national treasures and not a white elephant with unnecessar­y appointmen­ts and contracts, similar to the ill-fated Centre for the Arts and Music – a project that was deemed redundant, considerin­g the number of theatres dotted around the capital and the whole country. All that this served was the egos of some people in past administra­tions and squandered millions that could have been better spent on developing a sense of culture and not displaying a non-existent one.

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