[MSN] China, which has suffered one of the biggest losses of cultural relics in history, yesterday reiterated its pledge to reclaim the artefacts.
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Efforts being made to reclaim cultural relics
www.chinaview.cn 2006-05-26 08:40:57
BEIJING, May 26 (Xinhuanet) -- What is lost must be found, and brought
back.
China, which has suffered one of the biggest losses of cultural relics
in history, yesterday reiterated its pledge to reclaim the artefacts.
"The Chinese Government attaches great importance to reclaiming the
treasures lost overseas," Shan Jixiang, head of the State Administration of
Cultural Heritage, told a press conference organized by the State Council
Information Office.
"The government has been putting increasing efforts in recent years on
recovering them."
There are at least 1 million Chinese artefacts in more than 200 foreign
museums across 47 countries, according to official figures.
Shan did not specify how the artefacts were "lost" but the country's
history has it that foreign invaders had stolen and looted tons of Chinese
cultural relics over the past centuries.
Some objects have also been spirited out of the country through trade
and smuggling.
Shan said China has sought legal means and international co-operation to
help retrieve the treasures.
The country has signed the Convention on the Means of Prohibiting and
Preventing the Illicit Import, Export and Transfer of Ownership of Cultural
Property, and entered into bilateral protocols with countries including Peru
and Italy, he said. The authorities also collaborate with the International
Criminal Police Organization and the customs organizations.
In 1996, when it signed a convention on the return of cultural relics
established by the International Institute for the Unification of Private
Laws, China made a legally-binding statement that it reserves the right to
reclaim the cultural relics that were illegally looted, People's Daily
reported earlier.
Most recently, China set up a special database to help reclaim the lost
cultural relics, Shan said, adding that the government's unremitting efforts
have paid dividends.
For example, in 2000, the country recovered from New Zealand a batch of
ceramics which were looted from Guangzhou, capital of Guangdong Province, by
the Eight-Power Allied Forces aggressive troops sent by eight countries in
1900.
Shan also said the country plans to conduct a third nationwide census of
cultural relics after a hiatus of 25 years.
Minister of Culture Sun Jiazheng said that the State Council yesterday
put 1,081 cultural heritage sites under State protection, joining 1,271
others that had been designated for top-level protection since 1949.
Sun said preparations were well on the way to mark the country's first
"Cultural Heritage Day," which the State Council decided to celebrate on the
second Saturday each June. It falls on June 10 this year.
The minister conceded that during urban development, some cities had not
done enough to protect old structures, adding demolition of historical
buildings must be strictly regulated.
Answering a question from the foreign media on cultural relics related
to the "cultural revolution" (1966-76), which began this month 40 years ago,
Sun said such materials are being collected in China.
The minister said a host of objects relating to the period had been lost
or scattered throughout the world but the The National Museum of China and
the National Library of China, among others, have collected a wealth of
relics and materials relating the "cultural revolution."
Some Chinese scholars including Ba Jin, a literary giant who died last
year, proposed the setting up of a museum featuring the "cultural
revolution."
The Chinese have the responsibility of letting their descendants
remember the lessons of the 10 years of calamity, Ba once said.
(Source: China Daily)
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