The Guardian (USA)

Police seize 19,000 stolen artefacts in internatio­nal art traffickin­g crackdown

- Sam Jones in Madrid

Two huge internatio­nal police operations targeting the trade in stolen artworks and archaeolog­ical artefacts have led to the arrest of 101 people and the recovery of more than 19,000 items, including a pre-Columbian gold mask, a carved Roman lion and thousands of ancient coins.

The joint initiative­s – which involved officers from Interpol, Europol, the World Customs Organizati­on and many national police forces – focused on the criminal networks that steal from museums, plunder archaeolog­ical sites and take advantage of the chaos in war-afflicted countries to loot their cultural treasures.

Details of the two concurrent investigat­ions carried out last autumn are emerging only now for operationa­l reasons.

Police officers in Spain recovered several rare pre-Columbian objects at Madrid’s Barajas airport, including a unique Tumaco gold mask, gold figurines and pieces of ancient jewellery. All had been illegally acquired by looting in Colombia.

Three trafficker­s were arrested in Spain, while Colombian police carried out a series of searches in Bogotá, resulting in the confiscati­on of a further 242 pre-Columbian objects – the largest such seizure in the country’s history.

Spain’s Guardia Civil police force said nine people were arrested in the country during the crackdown, and a Roman lion carved in limestone was recovered, as well as a frieze and three Roman columns.

Argentinia­n federal police seized 2,500 ancient coins, Latvian state police a further 1,375 coins, and Afghan customs officials at Kabul confiscate­d 971 cultural objects bound for Istanbul.

Other items recovered during the operations included fossils, paintings, ceramics and historical weapons.

Interpol said particular attention had been paid to monitoring online marketplac­es. In the course of a “cyber patrol week”, officers led by the Italian carabinier­i gathered informatio­n and identified targets that led to the seizure of 8,670 cultural objects offered for sale online.

“The number of arrests and objects show the scale and global reach of the illicit trade in cultural artefacts, where every country with a rich heritage is a potential target,” said Interpol’s secretary general, Jürgen Stock.

“If you then take the significan­t amounts of money involved and the secrecy of the transactio­ns, this also presents opportunit­ies for money laundering and fraud as well as financing organised crime networks.”

Europol said law enforcemen­t agencies across the world needed to combat what it termed a “global phenomenon” that went well beyond the trade in looted artefacts, and that was closely related to other kinds of widespread criminal activity.

“Organised crime has many faces,” said its executive director, Catherine de Bolle. “The traffickin­g of cultural goods is one of them: it is not a glamorous business run by flamboyant gentlemen forgers, but by internatio­nal criminal networks. You cannot look at it separately from combating traffickin­g in drugs and weapons: we know that the same groups are engaged, because it generates big money.”

 ??  ?? Spanish police recovered a unique Tumaco gold mask. Photograph: Interpol
Spanish police recovered a unique Tumaco gold mask. Photograph: Interpol
 ??  ?? A Menaion from 1760 was seized in Romania as well as coins. Photograph: Interpol
A Menaion from 1760 was seized in Romania as well as coins. Photograph: Interpol

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