How Cambodia's temples fell to looters
New research has uncovered the criminal system that enabled a ring of
army officials to smuggle tens of thousands of antiquities out of
Cambodia during the country's years of unrest between 1970 and 1998.
Deutsche Welle | 25 June 2014
These days, many of Cambodia's ancient Angkorian temples are denuded.
Pedestals supporting the feet of statues whose bodies have been cleaved
off, and walls are pockmarked with holes where reliefs once stood.
But while the temples have been standing for hundreds of years, much of
that looting took place over the course of just three decades thanks to a
highly organized criminal ring involving army officials on both sides
of the border, research published this month in the British Journal of
Criminology has found.
An unprecedented case study of an antiquities trafficking network, the
paper by criminologist Simon Mackenzie and cultural heritage lawyer Tess
Davis – both of the University of Glasgow – details the ordered system
that allowed tens of thousands of antiquities to leave the country
during the years of unrest between 1970 and 1998.
In Banteay Chhmar, "local villagers were 'invited' (in the sense of
'instructed') to loot the temple at night by these various armed
factions, who effectively functioned as gang masters for this looting
enterprise," note the authors.
Paid the equivalent of USD 12 a day, the workers "faced violent intimidation and possibly death if they refused."
The setup, as recounted by former looters, was replicated at six major
archaeological sites across the country where the researchers carried
out interviews.
Popular collectables
Hundreds of years after the fall of the Angkorian Empire, Khmer
antiquities remain one of the most popular collectables. Statues grace
the covers of auction house catalogues, and museums flaunt their
collections. But as more research emerges, it has become apparent that
many pieces are "blood antiquities," looted to help fund conflict and
criminal enterprise.
"A main conclusion of both our published and forthcoming research is
that organized criminals and armed factions did indeed seek to fund
their operations through antiquities trafficking. This destruction had a
financial motive. It's a textbook case of supply and demand," said
Davis, an Affiliate Researcher at the Scottish Centre for Crime and
Justice Research.
Much of the looting appears to have begun in 1970, when a US-backed coup
plunged the country into civil war and gave rise to the Khmer Rouge,
who instituted their bloody rule five years later. When the communist
regime collapsed in 1979, guerilla fighters continued to wage battle –
first with the Vietnamese army that occupied Cambodia for the next
decade, then with government forces in the 1990s.
"In Cambodia, the plunder would remain closely tied to the conflict
through to the 1998 surrender of the Khmer Rouge, with heavy involvement
from the various armed forces in the country (including the Cambodian
military, paramilitary groups and the Khmer Rouge)," the paper explains.
Heavy military involvement meant massive undertakings.
In the early 1970s, "soldiers from the US-backed Lon Nol army closed off
the [Banteay Chhmar] complex, raided it during the night and carried
off their spoils by helicopter."
Almost thirty years later, soldiers performed a similar feat in 1998,
"surround[ing] the temple at dawn and blockad[ing] it from the local
community, with no explanation… For the next two weeks, heavy machinery
was used to break up the complex and when the clamor finally stopped,
soldiers loaded an estimated 30 tons of stone—including an entire 30 m
of the southern wall, prized for its skilled bas-reliefs of Lokeshvara
and Apsaras—onto six trucks and drive off for the Thai border just 15 km
away."
One truck was stopped by Thai authorities and, after much wrangling, the
spoils returned to Cambodia. The rest has vanished – presumably sold
off to collectors and dealers across the globe.
Dougald O'Reilly, a senior professor of archaeology at the Australian
National University, called the research "fascinating" and unparalleled.
"This is really the first data collected on this with academic rigor and
so gives us some very interesting insights into the traffic in
antiquities," he wrote in an email.
"It may… give pause for thought to those working in acquisitions in
museums regarding the criminal enterprises at work in conflict zones and
developing countries and should also cause reflection on where the
funds are going and what they may be used for."
Smuggling
The researchers tracked down looters, brokers and dealers on both sides
of the border. Thom, a pseudonym, was a child soldier for the Khmer
Rouge who later defected and began trafficking statues in the 1980s.
Over the decades, Thom grew expert in his field. "Some of the objects
his network handled were pieces that are now celebrated as among the
most important Khmer statues in world collections,” the study notes.
Looting was carried out by villagers, both willing and unwilling, who would "obey through fear of his reputation for violence."
Looted works were smuggled to Sisophon city, located about 50 kilometers
from the border. There, a pair of brothers "individually attached to
different military factions," would take over the trafficking to
Thailand.
The men, whose pseudonyms are given as Sambath and Phala (now deceased),
were renowned for their brutality. After their uncle tried to
circumvent the brothers by carrying out a deal with Thom himself,
Sambath had him killed, according to Thom.
Because of their paramilitary ties, smuggling – even of large statuary – was relatively easy.
"Phala would deliver the statues from Sisophon to the Thai border, often
using military trucks that he had access to through his affiliation
with a paramilitary faction," the report notes.
In Thailand, Rachana – a receiver – and Kanok, a dealer with international ties, took over with the help of the military.
"People in Sa Kaeo remember trucks, many of them military vehicles,
filled with looted statues rolling through the town on their way to
Bangkok from the 1970s until around ten years ago," the report says.
"Thom remembered Kanok to have tight links with the Thai military, so
all the Cambodian side of the network had to do was to get the objects
to the border and they would be delivered from there to Kanok by the
military-dealing network on the Thai side."
Among Kanok's customers were international collectors, museums and
auction houses. As more evidence emerges as to their collections'
provenance, widespread looting has landed several arts institutions in
hot water in recent years.
"We were surprised — and disturbed — to confirm how few steps there were
between source and market. Our sources reported that "Kanok" dealt
directly with the very top collectors, museums, and auction houses, just
as he dealt directly with looters and traffickers,” Davis told DW.
"As the Met [Museum] itself has said, every piece in a museum comes from
somewhere. And yet with rare exception, there is no legal source of
antiquities, ironically only a legal market. It was never 'legal' to
hack a god off Angkor, just as it's never been legal to hack a saint off
Notre Dame. Besides the Musée Guimet in Paris, I personally don't know
of another foreign institution that can demonstrate their Khmer art
collection left Cambodia legally."
'Looting is ongoing'
As arts institutions themselves have began grudgingly admitting as much,
Cambodia has undertaken a fairly successful mission to have its looted
antiquities returned.
Early this month, three 1,000-year-old statues were welcomed back in a
ceremony after being returned by California's Norton Simon museum and
auction houses Sotheby's and Christie's. They followed in the footsteps
of New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art, which made a similar move last
year, returning a pair of tenth century statues after research
confirmed they had been illegally cut from their bases and trafficked
out of Cambodia.
But if the government appears keen to now have its stolen cultural
heritage restored, it has not always been eager to address the problems
within the country.
The study points out at the relatively contemporary and staggering
Banteay Chhmar theft of 1998 went unpunished "even though an
investigation later identified the Cambodian generals responsible and
further implicated the military in other thefts."
And while looting has abated (primarily because "most of the good pieces
are gone"), the authors say that "there is an open question around how
much is still going on."
"Remnants of the trafficking networks remain in place. We were told by a
receiver at the Thai border that if we wanted any piece that was
currently in situ, we should go and take a picture of it and he would
arrange for it to be looted and delivered to us within a month."
O'Reilly, who is also the founder of archaeological protection
organization Heritage Watch, says there is little doubt looting is
ongoing.
"While the article points out that the trade in monumental art has
declined there has been a dramatic upswing in the looting of prehistoric
sites since 2000. It is almost impossible to find a prehistoric mound
in Cambodia that has not been affected by looting to some degree," he
said. "This is a real tragedy as it robs us of the ability to understand
the socio-political development of societies that gave rise to Angkor."
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