|
WASHINGTON, Nov. 11 (Xinhuanet) -- Over two years
after Iraq's National Museum was sacked by looters following the US invasion, up
to 10,000 Iraqi antiquities are still unrecovered, a US official said here
Friday.
Col. Matthew Bogdanos, the US investigator leading
the search for looted Iraqi antiquities, said among the 10,000 to 15,000 items
that went missing from the National Museum in Baghdad, over 5,000 have been
recovered.
The museum, once boasting of largest collections of
antiquitiesin the Middle East, suffered from looting and serious damage by
thousands of looters in a state of chaos after the US troops took Baghdad in
April, 2003.
Bogdanos said with the cooperation of police,
academics and customs from six countries, more than 5,000 items have so far
beenrecovered, including some 2,000 found by the Jordanians.
To recover all the rest lost items, more help is
needed from Iraq's neighbors, particularly Iran and Turkey, he said.
Bogdanos said his investigation found that three
kinds of looters participated in the pilfering.
One group includes professionals who took some of the
greatest rarities, such as the first known realistic sculpture of a human face.
Secondly, there are thieves who swept up many pieces,
includingcopies and forgeries, into bags.
Finally, there are insiders who took valuable ancient
seals andjewelry.
The past over two years have seen many of Iraq's
antiquities stolen or looted and many of its historical sites destroyed in
theongoing conflicts, and some international archeologists have blamed the US
military for its negligence in protecting the country's historical heritage.
Enditem |