Cambodia's stolen warriors A special two-part investigation explores how a famousCambodian temple statue ended up in a New York auction house. |
101 East / Al Jazeera | 17 September 2014
When he leafed through Sotheby's auction catalogue last year, archaeologist Simon Warrack could not believe what he saw. With
a starting bid of $2m, a life-sized, 500-pound warrior statue dating
back to the Cambodian Khmer dynasty was to be auctioned in New York. The
catalogue boasted: 'If one could choose only one sculpture to symbolise
the glory of Khmer art, this figure could fulfill such a challenge'.
What the catalogue neglects to mention is that the spectacular statue
watched over the temples of Koh Ker for more than 1,000 years, before
Khmer Rouge looters cut him and his twin brother off their pedestals in
the early 1970s. By selling scores of ancient artefacts like these to
international art smuggling cartels, the communist group financed their
bloody war in Cambodia, which claimed the lives of two million people.
"Sotheby's must be aware of the bloody history of these statues. If
this deal isn't stopped, it's a carte blanche for art smugglers around
the world," he says.
Tess Davis, an American lawyer and smuggling expert, is trying to get
the statue featured in the Sotheby's catalogue returned to Cambodia.
"I think it is very important, that now that the war is over, now
that Cambodia is recovering and coming back stronger than ever, that
these pieces be reunited. It's not just about art. It's more important
than that."
So how did Cambodia's most famous temple statue end up in a Sotheby's auction catalogue?
In the first of a two-part special investigation, 101 East
travels to Cambodia to see the destruction wrought by antique looters,
and to the US to meet the officers tasked with investigating
international antique smuggling networks.
Should Cambodian artefacts be in museums and private art collections? Share your views @AJ101East #StolenWarriors
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