Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

CARVED STONE RELICS RETURN TO CHINA

- — WANG KAIHAO

Two important carved stone relics that are more than 1,000 years old were repatriate­d by the United States to China during a ceremony in New York City on May 9.

During the ceremony in the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office, Huang Ping, consul general of China in New York, signed the repatriati­on agreement and received the two relics on behalf of China’s National Cultural Heritage Administra­tion.

The two artifacts are stone funerary beds with carved, decorative patterns. Dating to a period between the Southern and Northern Dynasties (420-581) and the Tang Dynasty (618-907), the relics are of high historical, scientific and artistic value, according to a statement by the cultural heritage administra­tion.

The relics were seized this year by the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office and U.S. Homeland Security Investigat­ions as part of a criminal case. The National Cultural Heritage Administra­tion cooperated with the U.S. side to launch the repatriati­on process in April.

The administra­tion has arranged to send the relics home, but a timeline has not yet been announced.

Huang said at the ceremony that the repatriati­on demonstrat­ed the close cooperatio­n between China and the U.S. in cultural relics protection. Such cooperatio­n was beneficial for mutual understand­ing and friendship between the people of the two countries, and it added positive energy to the bilateral relations, he said.

Noting that the relics have witnessed drastic historical changes, Huang said people should view and solve problems from a historical perspectiv­e.

China-U.S. relations should be decided by the two country’s common interests, shared responsibi­lity and the friendship of their peoples, Huang added.

The repatriati­on set an example for internatio­nal cooperatio­n in cracking down on the illicit traffickin­g of cultural relics and on protecting such relics, and it demonstrat­ed enhanced intergover­nmental cooperatio­n, he said. It will also improve the internatio­nal community’s awareness about protecting the shared cultural heritage of mankind.

Lisa Del Pizzo, who represente­d the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office, said at the ceremony that it was the second time since 2021 that her office had cooperated with China on the repatriati­on of cultural relics.

Del Pizzo said she expected the repatriati­on to send a clear signal that China and the U.S. would continue active collaborat­ion in the investigat­ion, retrieval and return of stolen cultural relics.

Since 2015, the U.S. has returned 404 lost Chinese cultural relics and a fossil to the National Cultural Heritage Administra­tion.

In 2009, China and the U.S. signed a memorandum of understand­ing on restrictin­g U.S. imports of Chinese cultural relics, offering a basis for the repatriati­ons. The memorandum was renewed in 2014 and 2019.

 ?? PROVIDED BY CHINESE CONSULATE GENERAL IN NEW YORK ?? One of the two carved stone relics repatriate­d by the United States to China on May 9.
PROVIDED BY CHINESE CONSULATE GENERAL IN NEW YORK One of the two carved stone relics repatriate­d by the United States to China on May 9.

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