by Xinhua writers Fu Shuangqi and Chang Ailing
BEIJING, Feb. 16 (Xinhua) -- Two bronze animal
sculptures, looted from a Chinese royal garden 149 years ago, will be auctioned
in Paris late this month. They symbolize a dilemma China is facing in retrieving
many of its cultural treasures from abroad.
"We wrote to Mr. Pierre Berge in October last year
after learning the two sculptures will be auctioned but did not receive any
reply yet," said Niu Xianfeng, deputy director of the National Treasure Funds of
China (NTFC), a non-governmental organization working since 2002 to return the
country's historical relics.
Niu's foundation was willing to negotiate with the
owner on how to bring the two sculptures back to China on the condition they
would not be auctioned, he said.
The bronze rabbit and rat heads were among 12 animal
head sculptures that formed the zodiacal clepsydra decorating the Calm Sea
Pavilion in the Old Summer Palace of Emperor Qianlong (1736-1795).
They were looted when the palace was burned down by
Anglo-French allied forces during the Second Opium War in 1860.
The NTFC successfully mediated the return of one of
the heads in 2003. With about 7 million yuan (1.01 million U.S. dollars),
donated by Macao billionaire Stanley Ho, the foundation bought the pig head
sculpture from a U.S. collector.
"We are not always so lucky," Niu said. "The
foundation depends on public donations. Many cases fail because we did not have
enough money."
In 2003, the NTFC contacted representatives of the
owner to buy the rabbit and rat head sculptures but the two sides failed to
reach an agreement on the price.
"They asked for 10 million U.S. dollars for each but
we only spent about 1 million on the pig head. We thought the price was too
high," Niu said.
At the upcoming auction, the relics were expected to
fetch 8 million to 10 million euros (about 10.4 million to 13 million U.S.
dollars) each.
Unlike the NTFC who does not purchase from auctions,
some Chinese collectors have been able to buy cultural artifacts and bring them
back to the country. Three animal head sculptures were purchased by a Chinese
company at two auctions held by Christie's and Sotheby's in Hong Kong in 2000.
Stanley Ho privately bought the horse head and then donated it to the
government. The whereabouts of the other five statues is unknown.
Despite those efforts, China's State Administration
of Cultural Heritage (SACH) openly voiced its objection to both auctions and
purchases of cultural objects which were exported illegally, including those
looted in wars.
Song Xinchao, director of the SACH museum department,
said authorities favored retrieving looted cultural relics through legal or
diplomatic proceedings but also welcomed donations from foreign collectors.
"To buy them back means we acknowledge they were
taken out of our country legally," Song told the Guangming Daily last November.
"It will be a compromise to the wrong thing and even an indulgence in crimes."
Legal and diplomatic retrieval is based on several
international conventions China signed, including the 1970 UNESCO Convention on
the Means of Prohibiting and Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer
of Ownership of Cultural Property and the 1995 Unidroit Convention on Stolen or
Illegally Exported Cultural Objects.
A team of 81 Chinese lawyers are planning to sue
Pierre Berge in France if the auction of the two sculptures is not stopped.
The fact that the conventions could not be applied
retroactively was a major obstacle to such legal proceedings, said Wang Yunxia,
a professor of cultural relics law at Beijing-based Renmin University.
"That means the convention applies only to cultural
objects that are stolen or illegally traded after the convention takes effect."
An estimated 1.64 million Chinese relics are owned by
foreign museums, SACH said. Even more than that are owned by private collectors.
A great number were looted, stolen and smuggled out of China between the 1860s
and 1949 when the country was subjected to colonial invasion and civil wars.
"I think the best way to get the relics back is
through diplomatic channels. An agreement between Chinese and foreign
governments is the most effective and direct way to tackle this issue," Wang
said. "If an agreement is not practical in the short term, we could at least
start negotiations on a certain relic."
Niu with the NTFC admitted the government channel
might be the most effective to retrieve these cultural relics, but this method
can't be used on every single case.
"To purchase them at a reasonable price is still the
most practical way," Niu said.
"I know what we want to do is difficult. But we can't
hold back because of difficulties. A breakthrough will be made only when you
start to make it," said Liu Yang, one of the lawyers working to get the rabbit
and rat heads back through legal means.