[MSN] Rare Look Inside Baghdad Museum

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Wed Dec 12 07:28:53 CET 2007


December 12, 2007
Rare Look Inside Baghdad Museum 
By CARA BUCKLEY

BAGHDAD - For a few brief hours Tuesday, three dozen spectators -
journalists, local politicians and their guards - gathered at the National
Museum of Iraq here, their voices echoing through its vast, darkened halls.
It was one of the few times outsiders had been allowed inside since Baghdad
fell, looters stripped the galleries of some 15,000 Mesopotamian artifacts,
and the museum became a wrenching symbol of the losses of the war.

Aside from a brief opening in late 2003, when officials and other guests
were invited in, the museum has been shuttered since the invasion. But there
has been a great push to reopen it of late. Its directors have managed to
recover 4,000 missing pieces, among them gems, Islamic coins and carved
stones. The pace of recovery picked up as word spread that rewards were
offered for items returned.

Still, the executive director, Amira Eidan, said Tuesday that she could not
forecast when the museum might reopen again because restoration efforts had
been slowed by insufficient financing. The cost of recovering the artifacts
has consumed the bulk of her museum's budget, and pieces sometimes have
turned up at foreign auctions and been too expensive or difficult to
retrieve, she said. 

The museum still houses hulking centuries-old statues and intricately
patterned stone panels, items too heavy for plunderers to haul off. Its most
valued items, including pieces of Assyrian gold known as the Nimrud
treasures, were saved because they had been sealed in crates and locked in a
bank vault. 

Yet on Tuesday, much of the museum's collection remained out of sight. Many
of the ancient heavy stone statues were covered in plastic. Dozens of glass
display cases sat empty but for thick layers of dust. Workers were mixing
epoxy in one gallery, the Assyrian Hall, where walls were lined with great
stone bas-relief and little else. The 4,000 pieces that have so far been
recovered remained in the museum's underground vaults.

Ms. Eidan, who had recently said that two halls of the museum would reopen
this month, said Tuesday that even if the museum was fully restored, she was
not certain that the city was stable enough to ensure a safe reopening. She
also lamented the illegal digging that continues at Baghdad's 12,000 largely
unguarded archaeological sites. According to Abdul Zahra al-Taliqani, a
spokesman for the Ministry of Culture, Tourism and Antiquities, thieves have
stolen, and likely trafficked, 17,000 pieces from these sites so far. 

American forces have been widely faulted for failing to protect the museum
as pillaging swept Baghdad after the invasion. Concern over the museum's
fate peaked again in August 2006, when the museum's director, Donny George,
resigned and left Iraq, saying he had been threatened by extremists with
ties to the Shiite-led government. 

The museum visit on Tuesday, a media event, was organized by Ahmad Chalabi,
the Shiite politician and former exile leader who helped shape the
Pentagon's case for war. By organizing the visit, Mr. Chalabi sought to
highlight the museum's restoration efforts and insert himself in the
recovery process. Before a row of photographers and cameramen, he presented
the museum's director with some 400 missing artifacts that he had procured
through a friend.

"We need help from international experts," he told Ms. Eidan. "We have so
many more missing pieces, we need to do active search to get them back."

In violence in Baghdad on Tuesday, two policemen were killed when a car bomb
exploded near security booths guarding the homes of Ayad Allawi, the former
prime minister, and Saleh al-Mutlak, a member of Parliament. 

Mr. Mutlak is the head of the Sunni-Arab party, the National Dialogue Front.
Twelve policemen and guards were wounded, though neither Mr. Allawi nor Mr.
Mutlak was hurt.

http://www.nytimes.com/



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