China Daily

China seeks return of statue

Netherland­s asked to assist in repatriati­on of missing relic

- By ZHANG YUNBI zhangyunbi@chinadaily.com.cn

A senior Chinese official has called on the Netherland­s to offer “fair judicial support” in a case in which Chinese villagers are seeking the return from a Dutch collector of a stolen ancient Buddha statue with a mummified monk inside.

Liu Yuzhu, Party secretary and head of the State Administra­tion of Cultural Heritage, told reporters on Friday that both China and the Netherland­s are bound by internatio­nal treaties banning theft, smuggling and illegal excavation of cultural relics.

Both government­s have the responsibi­lity and obligation to protect cultural relics from unlawful infringeme­nt, he said in response to a question raised by a Dutch reporter on Friday in Beijing.

The question about the statue came up at an interview organized by the media center of the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China.

The 1,000-year-old statue, with the remains of a monk inside, was in an exhibition last year in the Netherland­s and Hungary before villagers in Yangchun, Fujian province, saw media reports about the exhibition­s, Xinhua News Agency reported. They believe the statue was stolen from their village temple in 1995.

On Friday, Liu said the statue was examined and found to be identical to the stolen relic. After efforts to obtain its return failed, a lawsuit was filed, he said.

“We hope to get the fair judicial support of the Netherland­s” on the relic’s return, Liu said.

Liu said China has demonstrat­ed its commitment to protect the world’s cultural relics. He said China has conducted 15 joint archaeolog­ical projects with nations involved in the Belt and Road Initiative. China also offered assistance to cultural relic repair missions in five of those countries, he said.

Also Friday, Xiang Zhaolun, vice-minister of culture, said 100,000 people will receive training during the 13th FiveYear Plan (2016-20) on intangible cultural heritage. Xiang said the program is being undertaken by his ministry and the Ministry of Education.

It offers study opportunit­ies, internship­s and other training, and 78 universiti­es and colleges are participat­ing, Xiang said.

Government­al efforts are being focused on rejuvenati­ng traditiona­l craftsmans­hip and spreading its use in modern life, Xiang said.

 ?? FENG YONGBIN / CHINA DAILY ?? Wang Xiaojie (second from right), China Central Television’s Beijing bureau chief and delegate to the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, answers questions from the media at a news conference on cultural developmen­t, Wang is flanked...
FENG YONGBIN / CHINA DAILY Wang Xiaojie (second from right), China Central Television’s Beijing bureau chief and delegate to the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China, answers questions from the media at a news conference on cultural developmen­t, Wang is flanked...

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