Off the wire
Cambodian Senate president embarks on 4-day visit to China  • Chinese building giant joins China's biggest tourism project in New Zealand  • One in five Aboriginal babies in western Australia have no birth certificate: report  • FDI in S.Korea hits record high in H1 at 10.5 bln dollars  • News Analysis: Australia's coveted AAA credit rating at risk following uncertain election  • Vietnam sees rising budget deficit in H1  • Interview: U.S. has complicated South China Sea issue: Australian expert  • Spotlight: China never a bully in South China Sea: experts  • Philippine police chief voices alarm over policemen who tested positive for illegal drugs  • Eight arrested after 275 kilograms of 'ice' seized in Australian drug bust  
You are here:   Home

Indian artifacts bought by National Gallery of Australia may have been looted

Xinhua, July 4, 2016 Adjust font size:

Canberra's National Gallery of Australia (NGA) may be forced to hand back priceless ancient Indian artifacts, after it was revealed they might have been acquired from an illegal smuggling ring.

The gallery has already been forced to hand over a statue, worth more than 4 million U.S dollars, but more pieces may have to be returned following the arrest of accused antiquity smuggler Deena Dayalan last month.

The NGA artifacts, an 1800-year-old limestone carving depicting a scene from the life of Buddha and a 1000-year-old stone Hindu goddess Pratyangira, were purchased by the gallery in 2005 for 1.5 million U.S dollars from Subhash Kapoor, who allegedly obtained the pieces from Dayalan.

Illicit antiquities trade expert Jason Felch told the Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) on Monday that evidence was beginning to show the two pieces were stolen.

"Investigators here in the United States have had evidence for some time that those objects were supplied by illegal traders in India," Felch said.

A statement released by the NGA on Monday said the gallery would cooperate fully with investigations and would happy hand over the artifacts if they are indeed stolen.

"The NGA has conducted thorough provenance research into these two sculptures and is working closely with Indian authorities on the next steps," the statement read.

"It is certainly possible they will be returned."

Felch said Dayalan allegedly organized thieves to raid ancient Indian temples, after which he would have stolen pieces shipped to him in the United States.

"He would then arrange for their export to Manhattan, where they were packaged and readied for market by Kapoor and then sold onto museums," Felch said. Endit