The Daily Telegraph

Greece demands return of Elgin Marbles as condition of exit deal

- By James Crisp BRUSSELS CORRESPOND­ENT

GREEK politician­s are campaignin­g for the Elgin Marbles to be returned to Athens as part of the Brexit negotiatio­ns between Britain and the European Union.

Stelios Kouloglou, a member of the European Parliament for the governing hard-left Syriza party, claims that EU treaty law means that the European Commission’s Brexit negotiator­s must raise the controvers­ial issue.

The Elgin or Parthenon Marbles are a collection of sculptures, inscriptio­ns and architectu­ral features acquired by Lord Elgin between 1801 and 1805.

Lord Elgin has been accused of stealing them or bribing officials to remove them from the Parthenon. They are now housed in the British Museum, which insists the marbles were legally bought from the Ottoman Empire, which ruled Athens at the time.

Mr Kouloglou, a respected investigat­ive journalist, has twice written to the commission asking for the marbles to be part of the Brexit negotiatio­ns. “Brexit negotiator­s must take into account the need to protect European cultural heritage,” he wrote.

“The Parthenon Marbles are considered as the greatest symbol of European culture. Therefore, reuniting the marbles would be both a sign of respect and civilised relationsh­ip between Great Britain and the EU, and much more [than] a legal necessity.”

The European Commission told The

Daily Telegraph that it did not believe that Articles 3, 50 and 167 of the treaty of the EU meant their negotiatin­g team were legally bound to address the issue.

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