Yuma Sun

Collection of rare centuries-old jewelry returns to Cambodia

- BY SOPHENG CHEANG

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia – A spectacula­r collection of centuries-old Cambodian jewelry has been returned to the Southeast Asian country, the latest treasures to be retrieved from the estate of well-known antiquitie­s collector and dealer Douglas Latchford, who was accused of buying and selling looted artifacts.

Cambodia’s Ministry of Culture and Fine Arts announced Monday that 77 pieces of Cambodian jewelry from the Latchford family collection arrived back in their homeland on Friday. It said the collection included items “such as gold and other precious metal pieces from the Pre-angkorian and Angkorian period including crowns, necklaces, bracelets, belts, earrings and amulets.” Angkor in the 9th to the 15th centuries was a powerful kingdom in the area of present-day Cambodia, and tourists can see its legacy at the famous Angkor Wat temple complex in the country’s northwest.

The ministry said the handover of the items involved Hun Many, a lawmaker who is the youngest son of Prime Minister Hun Sen; Cambodia’s ambassador to Britain; representa­tives of Britain’s Foreign Office; the Art & Antiques Unit of London’s Metropolit­an Police; and the Arts Council England.

The return of the items followed a September 2020 agreement with Latchford’s family under which all Cambodian artifacts in their possession would be returned to Cambodia. Other stone and bronze artifacts were returned in September 2021.

Latchford, known as both an expert and a dealer in Cambodian and Indian antiquitie­s, died in August 2020 at age 88 in Bangkok, Thailand, where he lived for decades.

In November 2018, U.S federal prosecutor­s indicted him on charges of wire fraud conspiracy and other crimes related to alleged traffickin­g in stolen and looted Cambodian antiquitie­s. It accused him of creating “false provenance­s” – documents about how and where the items were obtained – and “falsified invoices and shipping documents” to conceal their origins. Experts believe many or most of the items he handled were looted from Cambodia during periods of war and instabilit­y, including in the 1970s when the country was under the brutal rule of the communist Khmer Rouge.

 ?? UNION YOUTH FEDERATION­S OF CAMBODIA VIA AP ?? THIS PHOTO RELEASED BY the Union Youth Federation­s of Cambodia (UYFC), shows jewelry on display at a room of Latchford family in London on Feb. 14.
UNION YOUTH FEDERATION­S OF CAMBODIA VIA AP THIS PHOTO RELEASED BY the Union Youth Federation­s of Cambodia (UYFC), shows jewelry on display at a room of Latchford family in London on Feb. 14.

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