Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

France presents artifact-return law

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PARIS — The French government presented a draft law Wednesday that would enable France to return certain cultural artifacts taken from African countries during the colonial era.

The law, which will go to parliament for considerat­ion, centers on the transfer of ownership of several African objects, including a saber loaned to Senegal last year.

Now-former French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe presented the sword to Senegalese President Macky Sall in November in Dakar. French media have described the saber as a historical­ly significan­t weapon that belonged to associates of El Hadj Omar Tall, a 19th century military leader and Muslim scholar who ruled a short-lived empire.

France also pledged to return 26 objects that French colonial troops looted in 1892 from a royal palace in the West African nation of Benin and were kept at the Musee Branly-Jacques-Chirac in Paris. The proposed law centers only on these objects from

Benin and Senegal.

French President Emmanuel Macron first announced plans to repatriate the cultural artifacts in 2018 following a report he commission­ed from academic researcher­s. The new legislatio­n stipulates that these objects must be given back within one year from when the law goes into effect.

Museums such as Paris’ Louvre and London’s British Museum have vociferous­ly opposed laws that would require them to send cultural artifacts back to their countries of origin, arguing that such policies would empty Western museums.

But critics of the West’s colonial-era collection­s have welcomed Macron’s incrementa­l move. Françoise Verges, a scholar on questions of culture, race and colonizati­on, is waiting for way more.

“There’s a huge, much larger work of restitutio­n that remains to be done,” Verges told The Associated Press. She points to the 2018 state-commission­ed study which counted at least 90 000 African works remaining in French museums.

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