The Borneo Post

Archaeolog­ist killed near Buddhist site, home to giant copper reserve

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KABUL: A roadside bomb killed an Afghan archaeolog­ist near an ancient Buddhist excavation site, also home to the country’s largest copper reserve, raising concerns about increasing threats to government- backed projects, officials said yesterday.

Security threats by insurgents have forced European and U. S. archaeolog­ists to pull out of the Mes Aynak site in recent years, leaving Afghan experts to pursue the work on their own and try to prevent rampant illegal mining.

Saturday’s attack wounded four employees of the cultural ministry near the excavation site, 40 km south of the capital, home to the remains of 5,000-year- old temples, residentia­l areas, markets and a fortress.

No group has claimed responsibi­lity. Taliban militants, seeking to reimpose strict Islamic law after their 2001 ouster, blew up two ancient giant Buddha statues in Bamiyan province in March that year because they were deemed un-Islamic.

“We never thought such action would be taken against us, because we are neither military nor highrankin­g government officials,” said archaeolog­ist Mohammad Rabi Saber, a colleague of the victims. “But after this incident, a kind of fear has spread among the archaeolog­y staff members.”

In 2008, a Chinese company, Metallurgi­cal Corporatio­n of China, was awarded a contract to recover copper from Mes Aynak but a series of protests to protect the Buddhist site stalled the project.

Afghan and internatio­nal archaeolog­ists began uncovering thousands of statues, manuscript­s, coins and monuments at Mes Aynak in 2009. The government has said that all antiques from Mes Aynak will be excavated before mining begins. — AFP

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