THE looting spree that has devastated Iraq’s museums has reopened old wounds between archaeologists and antiquities dealers. Archaeologists want a total ban on all trade in antiquities from Iraq. They say it offers the only hope of retrieving the stolen treasures while the trail is still warm, and of preventing further looting. But the dealers, whose livelihood relies on the trade, say such a ban would violate their human rights.
Archaeologists are adamant. “If the dealers weren’t buying this stuff, then it wouldn’t be looted,” claims Colin Renfrew, director of the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research at the University of Cambridge. Like many of his colleagues, he favours a ban on all trade in antiquities from Iraq. The most famous stolen pieces will be impossible to sell openly anyway. And, he says, a ban would prevent less well-known artefacts from making it onto the market and deter further looting. McGuire Gibson, an expert in Iraqi antiquities from the University of Chicago, also wants the trade shut down. Traders “have been dealing in stolen goods for years, and they know it”, he says.
But dealers insist that the scientists have no right to try to shut down their trade, even temporarily. Reputable dealers won’t touch anything they know is stolen, says London-based antiquities dealer Rupert Wace. “There is a lot legally on the market,” he adds. “You can’t just declare [it all] illegal.” And James Ede of the Antiquities Dealers Association in London says a ban would be counterproductive. “There has to be a market. That’s where items will turn up,” he says.
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Some compromise between the two sides will have to be found. UNESCO, the UN’s cultural organisation, is putting a motion before the UN Security Council that will place a temporary ban on all trade in Iraqi antiquities that do not have a cast-iron history of ownership. And the British government is putting its weight behind a similar bill that would require anyone in Britain selling antiquities to prove that a piece is not stolen.
Another possibility would be to offer an amnesty to encourage people to return stolen items that they might have acquired in good faith without fear of prosecution. But no one has come up with an official proposal for this, and an amnesty would have to be in place for years, or more likely decades.
The idea of offering rewards for the return of stolen pieces is widely opposed though. Paying the market rate for many of the items would be too costly, and might encourage further looting. “People shouldn’t be paid,” says Laurent Levi-Strauss at UNESCO’s cultural heritage division. “Otherwise there will be a temptation to steal objects in order to get the reward.”
What is agreed is that a searchable database of looted items should be established quickly so reputable dealers can check if they are being offered stolen goods. The University of Chicago’s Oriental Institute has already set up a website showing pictures of some of the treasures known to be missing. But officials from Iraq’s State Board of Antiquities say it will take four to six months to put together a complete list of looted items.
The depressing lesson from recent history is that archaeologists will have to wait a lot longer than that to see the treasures again. Thousands of items have gone missing since the 1991 Gulf war, and only a handful of them have resurfaced. “In terms of the antiquities market, 12 years is nothing,” says Ellen Herscher of the Archaeological Institute of America in Boston. Dealers or middlemen may hold onto stolen items for decades, she says. Many art works looted during the Second World War are only now beginning to turn up, as the people who originally acquired them die.
The outlook for retrieving items that have not yet left Iraq is less gloomy. The museums are now secure, and daily radio broadcasts and appeals by Iraqi clerics have persuaded many people to return souvenirs from the museums. On one day, 50 items were returned.
But this doesn’t mean looting has stopped. Iraq’s archaeological sites are still unguarded, and action to protect them is urgently needed. Until the 1991 war, the Iraqi antiquities board did this extremely effectively, but 12 years of UN sanctions have starved the board of resources and manpower. Organised gangs of looters have now established shipment routes through Iran and Israel to buyers in Europe, the US and Japan.
The looting is most obvious at major sites such as Umma and Umm-al-aqarb in southern Iraq. “If you go there today, you find huge holes where people have used heavy equipment to dig the sites,” says Iraqi archaeologist Mark Altaweel, who is now at the University of Chicago’s Oriental Institute. The fall of Baghdad presented the gangs with the opportunity of a lifetime, he says. Now the museums are secure, he fears the looters will shift their attention back to the sites. “The museum was a one-time heist,” he says. “The sites were their bread and butter. That’s probably what they’re going back to.”
It is also clear that coalition forces are doing little to stem the continuing flow of pieces out of the country. “Control of the borders is almost zero,” says Donny George of the National Museum of Iraq in Baghdad. “Anyone can take anything and go out.” A team of archaeologists from the British Museum in London confirmed that picture when they returned from Baghdad last week.
Archaeologists hold the US and its allies to blame for failing to preventing the pillage. The least the coalition can do now, they say, is act decisively to prevent further looting and to retrieve the stolen treasures. Rebuilding the museums’ collections would provide a focal point for Iraq’s recovery, argues Paul Zimansky of Boston University. “This is something besides oil that makes Iraq a very special place,” he says. “It’s something you can rebuild the country around.”

What happens now
• Teams of Iraqi-trained curators will document loss and damage with help from UNESCO and the British Museum, which will take an estimated 4 to 6 months. UNESCO will host a database of missing artefacts.
• Iraq’s Antiquities service will survey looting at the archaeological sites, which will take an estimated 6 months
• UNESCO motion before the UN Security Council would impose a temporary ban on the sale of Iraqi antiquities that lack a documented history proving legitimate ownership
• UNESCO will send an eight-person team to help the Iraqis clear up. Major funding so far: $400,000 from Italy and $250,000 from Switzerland
• The British Museum will coordinate offers of financial help