The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Norway’s Kon-Tiki museum agrees to return Easter Island items

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SANTIAGO: Norway agreed Thursday to hand back thousands of artefacts removed from Easter Island by the explorer Thor Heyerdahl during his trans-Pacific raft expedition­s in the 1950s.

An agreement was signed by representa­tives of Oslo’s KonTiki Museum and officials of Chile’s culture ministry at a ceremony in Santiago as part of a state visit by Norway’s King Harald V and Queen Sonja.

The museum pieces include carved artifacts and human bones from the Rapa-Nui, the first inhabitant­s of the remote Chilean island in the Pacific.

“Our common interest is that the objects are returned and, above all, delivered to a well-equipped museum,” said the museum’s director Martin Biehl.

He warned however that the repatriati­on process “will take time.”

Heyerdahl’s family said he had long wanted to return the pieces he collected in expedition­s in the mid-1950s and mid-1980s, currently exhibited in the Oslo museum. The signing ceremony was also attended by Thor Heyerdahl Jr. who accompanie­d his father on one of his expedition­s to the island in 1955, when he was 17.

“The repatriati­on is a fulfillmen­t of my father’s promise to the Rapa-Nui authoritie­s, that the objects would be returned after they had been analysed and published,” he said.

Anthropolo­gist and adventurer Heyerdahl became famous in 1947 when he and a crew of five crossed much of the Pacific on a reed raft, the KonTiki.

He was seeking to prove his theory that the Polynesian islands could have been settled by prehistori­c South American people, and not by settlers from Asia as most scholars believed. Heyerdahl died in 2002 aged 87.

“The study of human remains – using DNA – could demonstrat­e a prehistori­c contact between Rapa-Nui and South America, which was the main thesis of my father,” Thor Heyerdahl Jr. said.

“As a ministry we have the mission to respond to the just demand of the Rapa-Nui people to recover their cultural heritage,” Chile’s Culture Minister Consuelo Valdes said in a statement.

“Today, one more step has been taken through this historic agreement with Norway, which will enable the return of valuable cultural and symbolic pieces.”

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