ARCHAEOLOGY:Worth reading in full. There's also a nice photo of one of the bowls. For background to the story, see here and follow the links back.
University Suppresses Report on Provenance of Iraqi Antiquities
Michael Balter
University College London (UCL), one of Britain's premier universities, has become embroiled in a dispute over its handling of a large collection of religious artifacts that may have been part of the illicit trade in archaeological relics from Iraq in recent years. Last year, a committee of experts UCL established to investigate the matter concluded that "on the balance of probabilities," the artifacts were illegally removed from Iraq, and in the past months Iraqi officials have taken steps to recover the relics. Their actions come after UCL agreed this summer to return the collection to its owner, a wealthy retired Norwegian businessman who had sued UCL for their recovery. As part of a settlement of that suit, UCL agreed not to publish the committee's report.
"It is shameful that a university should set up an independent inquiry and then connive with the collector whose antiquities are under scrutiny to suppress the report through the vehicle of an out-of-court settlement," says Colin Renfrew, an archaeologist at the University of Cambridge, U.K., and a longtime critic of trade in antiquities of questionable provenance. Renfrew was one of three experts appointed by UCL in early 2005 to look into allegations about the provenance of the Aramaic incantation bowls and to propose new antiquities guidelines. Neil Brodie, an archaeologist at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California, and former research director of Cambridge's Illicit Antiquities Research Centre--created by Renfrew in 1996--calls suppression of the report "an attack on academic freedom, because the illegal trade in antiquities is a legitimate research subject."
Salah al-Shaikhly, Iraq's ambassador to the United Kingdom, told Science last week that Iraqi authorities have asked British authorities to block the export of the bowls and that the Iraqi government hopes to go to court to recover the bowls "in a matter of weeks." The removal of the artifacts, al-Shaikhly says, is "a great loss to the Iraqi national heritage."
The affair has also caused considerable discomfort within the university's Institute of Archaeology, which has played a leading role in developing strict antiquities rules. "I deeply regret the fact that the panel's report will not be published," says UCL archaeologist Kathryn Tubb, who co-wrote the institute's guidelines. "The results of the deliberations were to have informed future policy for the whole of UCL."
UCL officials have refused to comment on the matter, and Martin Schøyen, the owner of the bowls, declined to be interviewed for this story. But a series of press statements on the Schøyen Collection's Web site (www.schoyencollection.com/news.htm) explains that "any assertion that the bowls in the Schøyen Collection might be looted is incorrect." The Web site notes that the artifacts came from a Jordanian collection "built over many years."
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I hope everyone involved in this dispute keeps it clear that the paramount concern is the safety and welfare of the bowls.