Memphis Sun
MemphisSun.com Friday 10th February 2012 Issue 41/2012
Follow us on Follow us on facebook








  • More Breaking International News

  • Blue economy needed to protect Mediterranean Sea and world's oceans - UN official
  • UNESCO ready to boost assistance as Myanmar moves ahead with reforms
  • UN invites countries to tune in for first World Radio Day
  • Spanish judge should not be prosecuted for doing his job, says UN rights office
  • UN-backed report warns of dangers of increasing electronic waste in West Africa
  • UN envoy calls on Israel to preserve health of Palestinian detainee on hunger strike
  • At least 11 Somalis perish in latest Gulf of Aden boat tragedy, UN reports
  • UN agency steps up aid delivery to refugees fleeing conflict in Mali
  • Libya: UN calls for justice after killings of displaced persons
  • UN welcomes charges against army colonel over mass rapes in Guinea
  • Spanish photographer wins world press photo award
  • UN chief seeks to ease Falkland tensions
    Get Breaking International News headlines emailed to you daily.

    Looted artifacts go back to Iraq
    Memphis Sun
    Thursday 9th September, 2010  


    The Iraqi government has put on display hundreds of artifacts recovered from many different sources.

    Over 500 pieces were recovered from the frenzy of looting at museums and archaeological sites that followed the 2003 US invasion.

    Now being shown at the Iraqi National Museum in Baghdad, the items span the ages from a 4,400-year-old statue of a Sumerian king to a specially ornamented AK-47 gun, once owned by Saddam Hussein.

    The priceless antiquities had been in the hands of collectors abroad, who had them confiscated when police from different nations were asked to cooperate in the search for the pieces, 15,000 of which are still missing.

    It is believed some countries, including Spain and Lebanon, have refused to cooperate in handing over missing objects.

    The most prominent of the stolen artifacts is the headless statue of a king from the ancient Sumerian civilization, which is more than 4,000 years old.

    It was discovered in the 1920s at the ancient city of Ur in southern Iraq and had been displayed at the museum until it was stolen during the early days of the war.

    The FBI listed its theft as among the world’s top 10 art crimes.


      Email this story to a friend

    Have your say on this story

    Your nickname (required)
    Message