Gulf Today

Egypt move on artefacts draws ire

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CAIRO: Egypt’s recent decision to transport ancient Pharaonic artefacts to a traffic circle in the congested heart of Cairo has fueled fresh controvers­y over the government’s handling of its archaeolog­ical heritage.

Cairo has some of the worst air pollution in the world, according to recent studies.

Archaeolog­ists and heritage experts fear vehicle exhaust will damage the four ram-headed sphinxes and an obelisk, currently en route to their new home in Tahrir Square.

Egypt’s President Abdel-fattah Al Sisi has weighed in to say that similar obelisks are displayed in Western cities, according to a statement late Monday.

But Dr Monica Hanna, a heritage expert, said Egyptian artefacts in cities like London, Paris and New York are themselves endangered by being outdoors.

“The sphinxes are made of sandstone, they are part of the dry environmen­t in Luxor, when they would be moved to Tahrir Square with all the pollution, they will deteriorat­e as a result of the reactions with the carbon dioxide and carbon monoxide in the air,” Hanna said.

She and a member of parliament are part of a lawsuit to block the artifacts’ move, filed recently by a local rights group.

Mostafa Waziri, secretary general of the Supreme Council of Antiquitie­s, said the government “will do everything” to protect the artefacts.

Tahrir Square also contains the Egyptian Museum.

The decision to move the artefacts as part of a larger renovation of Tahrir Square was taken without debate in parliament.

The controvers­y only surfaced after archaeolog­ists objected.

Since coming to power in 2013, Sisi has touted a number of megaprojec­ts aimed at rebuilding and expanding infrastruc­ture. Those include an expansion of the Suez Canal and a new Egyptian museum near the Giza Pyramids.

A centerpiec­e of the new museum is a towering statue of Ramses II. It once stood in a busy square near Cairo’s main railway station, but was removed in the 1990s due to preservati­on concerns.

Waziri, the antiquitie­s chief, said the four sphinxes are not part of the famed avenue of sphinxes in the city of Luxor. They were among several located behind the first edifice of the temple of Karnak. The obelisk was recently moved to Cairo from the San Al Haggar archaeolog­ical site in the Nile Delta, the ministry said.

 ??  ?? ↑ Police cadets take part in a training session at an academy in Cairo on Tuesday. Agence France-presse
↑ Police cadets take part in a training session at an academy in Cairo on Tuesday. Agence France-presse

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