United Nations General Assembly

  • 15 December 2021, artnet

    BM Parthenon Gallery landscape

    Parthenon Galleries, Room 18 in the Briish Mueum remained closed for 13 months and were reopened this week, on Monday 13 December 2021 

    Dan Hicks' Op-Ed article in artnet says it all. Wednesday 15 December 2021 was the 10th anniversary of Christopher Hitchens' death. For those of you that have supported our Committee for nearly four decades and those of you that have joined us recently, the book that Christopher Hitchens wrote, is one to also read. 

    Dan Hicks article 'The U.K. Has Held Onto the Parthenon Marbles for Centuries—But the Tide Is Turning' in arnet suggests that change may come by 2030. As we circulated this article to our members, Alex M Benakis emailed a swift response: 'oh please can we do better than 2030! I will be 93! Don't know if I can hang on for that long.'

    Dan starts his article by quoting Christopher Hitchens: "those who support the status quo at the British Museum have the great advantage of inertia on their side.” Dan Hicks adds:'Today, things could hardly be more different.' As more museums are considering returing artefacts to their countries of origin. The best example to date are the returns of the Benin Bronzes.

    The third edition Christopher Hitchens book 'The Parthenon Marbles, The Case for Reunification' was launched at Chatham House in May 2008 by BCRPM with George Bizos and Christopher Hitchens travelling to London, a year before the opening of the new Acropolis Museum. It is available from Verso, you can follow the link here.

    'Now that the Benin Bronzes are being returned by an ever-growing number of European and North American institutions, might we finally see the return of the Parthenon Marbles?' Asks Dan Hicks. He believes so and adds: 'today, the longstanding push-and-pull between Athens and London over the legal technicalities of what constitutes rightful ownership and what museum press-officers prefer to euphemistically call acquisition is being reframed.'

    Dan also feels that 'matters came to a head this fall, on September 28, when a resolution about the return of the Marbles came before UNESCO’s Return and Restitution Intergovernmental Committee (ICPRCP). The British rhetoric that the British Museum “is a world museum” sounded tired coming after the elegant claim by professor Nikos Stampolidis, the newly-elected Director-General of the Acropolis Museum, that “the return of the Parthenon Marbles back to Greece is a universal demand.”

    Nikos Stampolidis at AM from To Vima article

    The newly elected Director-General of the Acropolis Museum, Professor Nikos Stampolidis in the Parthenon Gallery, Athens, Greece.

    'The committee’s concluding decision stated that “the obligation to return the Parthenon Sculptures lies squarely” on the U.K. government and expressed “disappointment” with the U.K.’s position. The group called on the nation “to reconsider its stand and proceed to a bonafide dialog with Greece on the matter.”

    This was swiftly followed by Kyriakos Mitsotakis London visit on 16 November 2021 and his eloquent request for reunification made on breakfast TV and at 10 Downing Street, plus the Science Museum. Janet Suzman, BCRPM's Chair wrote: 'Sometimes fairy tales come true: I never thought to see the stunning coverage given to the Parthenon Marbles by two leading right-wing newspapers, The Mail and The Telegraph.' To read her article follow the link here.

    Just last week on 08 December 2021, the United Nations General Assembly unanimously adopted a resolution (supported by 111 countries) introduced by Greece entitled: “Return or restitution of cultural property to the countries of origin”.

    Dan Hicks concludes that 'predictions are always risky, and as an archaeologist I confess that the future is technically not my period of expertise. Nonetheless, in this new cultural, internationalist, and intellectual atmosphere, it’s hard to believe that the Parthenon Marbles won’t have been reunited in Athens by the end of the decade.' To read the full article on arnet, follow the link here.

    Dan Hicks is Professor of Contemporary Archaeology at the University of Oxford. His latest book, The Brutish Museums: the Benin Bronzes, Colonial Violence and Cultural Restitution is now out in paperback. Twitter: @ProfDanHicks

     

  •  08 December 2021

    The United Nations (UN) General Assembly has unanimously adopted a resolution (supported by 111 countries) introduced by Greece entitled: “Return or restitution of cultural property to the countries of origin”. This resolution received the most support by member states, including African states.

    This is a significant result for this resolution, which was adopted by the 76th UNGA's Plenary Session on Monday, 06 December 2021.

    Greece's Ministry of Foreign Affairs in a press release notes: "This latest success of our country is part of its tireless international efforts to protect cultural goods in particular, but also cultural heritage in general, from their illegal trafficking both in peacetime and in wartime. In addition, it highlights the need to reintegrate into their historical environment cultural goods that have been stolen and illegally possessed." 

    It is hoped that this may assist Greece's ongoing diplomatic efforts in persuading the British government and the British Museum to reunite the Parthenon Marbles that are still in London with those in the Acropolis Museum in Athens.

    "Cultural property is not simply a testimony of a nation's past but the reflection of a country's history and heritage," Greece's representative at the UN, Maria Theofili, told the assembly. "Therefore it must be protected... and be restored to its historic environment where it could best inspire the collective conscience of humanity."

    Greece's Prime Minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis visited the UK three weeks ago and met with UK's Prime Minister Boris Johnson to suggest dialogue on the matter of the Parthenon Marbles, in order to find a solution to the continued division of these sculptures, which ultimately will always belong to the Parthenon.

    To read the document, follow the link here.

    The Coordinator of this Resolution was Mrs Artemis Papathanassiou, Senior Legal Advisor at the Greek Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Mrs Papathanassiou presided over the relevant negotiations. 

    Significant also this year, was Greece' s recent presentation at UNESCO's ICPRCP session 27-29 September 2021. More on the outcome of that session in our news posts on this website:

    The ICPRCP's new decision recognises the intergovernmental nature of the request for the Parthenon Marbles 01.10.2021

    UK Government disagrees with UNESCO's ICPRCP decision 07.10.2021

    Labour's opportunity to stand united on the reunification of the Parthenon Marbles 04.12.2021

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