Waikato Times

Firm returns artefacts to Iraq

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The priceless artefacts entered the United States seven years ago in packages labelled ‘‘tile samples’’ that were shipped to several Hobby Lobby locations.

Yesterday, almost 4000 ancient artefacts – including objects from the ‘‘lost city’’ of Irisagrig – that had been smuggled into the US were officially returned to the Republic of Iraq at a celebratio­n at the residence of Iraqi Ambassador Fareed Yasseen.

Calling the repatriati­on an act of ‘‘historic justice,’’ Yasseen thanked the federal agents responsibl­e for recovering the smuggled antiquitie­s, items he described as ‘‘part of our soul.’’

‘‘Iraqis have long memories. We have a kinship with these artefacts,’’ Yasseen said.

The event marked the end of to the internatio­nal investigat­ion of black-market antiquitie­s and the evangelica­l Green family, the owners of Hobby Lobby and collectors of biblical material who opened the Museum of the Bible in Washington last November. The museum was not involved in the settlement, and the returned objects were not part of the its collection.

The 3800 artefacts – including cuneiform tablets, cylinder seals and clay bullae dating back to the third millennium B.C. – will be turned over to Iraq’s Ministry of Culture and to museums and universiti­es for study and exhibition, the ambassador said.

In 2010, Hobby Lobby was offered a trove of items from ancient Mesopotami­a in a deal that ‘‘was fraught with red flags,’’ said Richard Donoghue, US attorney for the Eastern District of New York. ‘‘Hobby Lobby’s expert advised them to be careful about acquiring Iraqi cultural property because hundreds of thousands of objects had been looted from Iraqi archaeolog­ical sites.’’ Company officials ignored the warnings. ‘‘The story should have ended there. Instead Hobby Lobby went ahead and bought the artefacts for US$1.6 million (NZ$2.2m),’’ Donoghue said. The Greens began collecting biblical material in 2009, and have amassed about 40,000 items, the family says. A few hundred are on display in the Washington museum.

Donoghue’s office reached a settlement with Hobby Lobby last July that required the company to forfeit the artefacts, pay a US$3 million fine and submit to federal oversight for 18 months, Donoghue said, adding that the agreement ‘‘served as a deterrent’’ to others considerin­g making deals on the black market.

Hobby Lobby officials did not respond to messages yesterday. When the settlement agreement was announced in July 2017, Hobby Lobby President Steve Green said the company ‘‘should have exercised more oversight and carefully questioned how the acquisitio­ns were handled.’’

The items recovered and repatriate­d tell the history of life from more than 4000 years ago, explained Yale University professor Eckart Frahm, one of two experts who authoritie­s asked to review the artefacts. Most of the cuneiform tablets Frahm looked at in late 2016 were administra­tive and legal documents, and most date to 2300-1600 B.C. Frahm was able to trace some to Irisagrig, an ancient city on the Tigris River. ‘‘The new texts from Irisagrig cast some fascinatin­g light on what is, indeed, quite literally a ’lost city.’

– Washington Post

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