Daily Dispatch

Benin wants treasures returned

Ex-colonial power France refuses, quoting a Unesco law to support its case

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BENIN is asking for the return of treasures that were taken during French colonial rule from the end of the 19th century, re-opening a thorny diplomatic issue that resonates across Africa.

Lawmakers and civil society groups from both countries have written to French President Francois Hollande, calling for the return of “colonial treasures”, including royal thrones and swords.

Many are now on display in French museums, including the Quai Branly in Paris, which exhibits indigenous art from across the world.

Signatorie­s to the open letter, which was published this week, described the objects as having “an exceptiona­l spiritual and proprietar­y value for the Benin people”.

France ruled Dahomey until 1960, when it was granted independen­ce and changed its name to Benin. Dahomey included the kingdom of the same name that dates back to about 1600.

Most of the artefacts have not been documented but Benin’s ambassador to the UN cultural body Unesco in Paris, Irenee Zevounou, believes some 4 500 to 6 000 are in France, including in private collection­s.

France’s stockpilin­g of treasures from Dahomey happened during colonial fighting between 1892 and 1894 but also by missionari­es who “robbed communitie­s of what they considered to be charms”, said Zevounou. Benin’s President Patrice Talon railed against French influence in its former colony during the election campaign that brought him to power last year.

“We don’t have oil, we don’t have gold but we do have these treasures which aren’t kept here,” one of the letter’s signatorie­s Beninese lawmaker, Orden Alladatin said.

Benin first called for the return of its treasures in July last year, then in September it made a formal request to France’s foreign ministry. This month, Benin’s foreign affairs and culture ministers travelled to the French capital. Another delegation is expected to follow suit.

In the letter, Hollande is asked to make “a gesture for history, a gesture for the future, a gesture for the friendship between peoples” in his last weeks in power before two-round presidenti­al polls next month and in May.

But the problem may not be as simple and as easily resolvable as it first appears.

For one, Benin has not drawn up a list of objects that it wishes to reclaim. But the main stumbling block is legal.

Benin’s government stated earlier this month that it intended to rely on the Unesco convention of 1970, which provides for “the transfer to cultural assets to their countries of origin or for their restitutio­n in case of illegal appropriat­ion”.

But the convention, to which France and Benin are both signatorie­s, is not retroactiv­e: it only applies to the transfer of objects since it came into force.

France’s foreign ministry is pushing this line and relying on “the legal principles of inalienabi­lity and imprescrip­tibility of public collection­s”, an official said in an e-mail.

“Since the works have been in museum collection­s often for more than a century, they are inalienabl­e,” lawyer Yves-Bernard Debie, who specialise­s in art sales law said. “The other legal problem which is raised here is the actual origin of the objects. The Kingdom of Dahomey stretched across what is now Benin and Nigeria. Is Benin justified in making this request?

“In a personal capacity I understand … it’s a painful and sensitive issue in Africa. But legally, there’s nothing.” — AFP

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