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U.S. Wants to Prevent Islamic State From Looting, Destruction and Trafficking of Antiquities

Friday, September 16, 2016 18:47
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(Before It's News)

Islamic State’s goal to take over the world involves more than murder, mayhem and destruction of valuable artifacts in the Middle East. The group also has found ways to profit from looted antiquities.

Now, United States officials are redoubling their efforts to protect ancient works of art. In a congressional briefing in Washington, D.C., on Sept. 8, professors and government representatives including State Department officials gathered to discuss the security of Middle East antiquities. While Islamic State is known to destroy large cultural antiquities to attract media attention (such as the public destruction of the Temple of Bel in Syria), the group also engages in the trafficking of antiquities to fund its operations.

Stopping the problem has been a challenge.

From The New York Times in January:

The police raid [in Shumen, Bulgaria,] last March [2015] was heralded as a rare success against the trafficking of antiquities, a crime that reached new levels as the Islamic State militant group took control of parts of Syria and Iraq, and destroyed and looted ancient sites. Yet it also highlighted the barriers that, dozens of art experts and officials in the United States and Europe say, hamper the fight against the illicit trade.

Laws around the world are weak and inconsistent, and customs enforcement can screen only a portion of what crosses international borders, according to officials and experts in trafficking. Long-established smuggling organizations are practiced in getting the goods to people willing to pay for them, and patient enough to stash ancient artifacts in warehouses until scrutiny dies down. Despite a near-universal outcry over Islamic State’s actions, few countries have shown interest in imposing new restrictions to curb the booming trade in antiquities, estimated to be worth billions of dollars a year.

“It’s a broken system that ISIS or anyone else, whoever is next, can play into,” said Donna Yates, an archaeologist at The Scottish Centre for Crime & Justice Research at the University of Glasgow.

Officials still do not know how the artifacts ended up in Shumen or whether they passed through Islamic State territory. For every seizure like the one here, many other pieces are believed to reach dealers and buyers in Vienna, Munich, London and New York. Dealers exploit the legal trade in antiquities to move objects that have been looted for years amid the conflicts in Syria and Iraq, as well as Libya, Yemen and Egypt, officials and experts said.

The sale of heritage objects has sparked renewed interest among U.S. national security officials, because Islamic State funds its activities in part by the sale of looted artifacts taken from its controlled territories in the Middle East. The artifacts can generate sizable revenues, estimated at $150 million to $200 million per year.

According to the U.S. Department of State in May 2015, “U.S. Special Forces raided the Syrian compound of Abu Sayyaf, the head of ISIL’s oil and gas, and antiquities division,” and discovered documents and hundreds of historical artifacts. The documents showed the moneymaking ability of Islamic State in looting antiquities.

Stephen Epstein, special adviser to the State Department’s Bureau of Near Eastern Affairs, expressed his concerns at the congressional briefing.

“Documents captured by the raid showed that Daesh [Islamic State] has elaborate bureaucracy devoted to the administration of the sale of antiquities. … The artifacts looted from Syria and Iraq have not immediately flooded the art market. Some have trickled onto the market, but most—especially the most costly pieces—have been warehoused awaiting a more propitious market environment.”

In addition to Islamic State’s financial strategy with seized artifacts, U.S. officials are focused on the preservation of cultural items. Corine Wegener, cultural heritage preservation officer at the Smithsonian Institution, spoke at the meeting about the importance of recovering Middle Eastern antiquities, because displaced populations might return to territories controlled by Islamic State.

“People need something to return to someday … ,” she said. “After you save people’s lives, you have to save people’s reason for living.”



Source: http://www.truthdig.com/eartotheground/item/us_wants_to_prevent_islamic_state_from_looting_destruction_and_trafficki/

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