9 Aug 2022

US hands backs looted artefacts from late smuggler's collection

2:53 pm on 9 August 2022

The United States will return 30 looted antiquities to Cambodia, including bronze and stone statues of Buddhist and Hindu deities carved more than 1000 years ago.

(FILES) This file handout photo released on July 15, 2021 courtesy of the United States Attorney's office Southern District of New York shows "Skanda on a Peacock", a 10th century Cambodian statue. - US authorities on August 8, 2022 returned to Cambodia 30 Khmer works of art stolen near the famous temples of Angkor, among them the sandstone statue "Skanda on a Peacock". The statue was stolen from the Prasat Krachap temple at Koh Ker in Cambodia, and sold by antiquities dealer Douglas Latchford into the international art market. "Skanda on a Peacock" is considered to be a masterpiece of artistic achievement and a valuable part of the Cambodian cultural heritage. (Photo by Handout / United States Attorney's Office / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO /UNITED STATES ATTORNEY'S OFFICE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK/HANDOUT" - NO MARKETING - NO ADVERTISING...

Skanda on a Peacock is among the works. Photo: AFP / US Attorney's office Southern District of New York

The country's archaeological sites - including Koh Ker, a capital of the ancient Khmer empire - suffered widespread looting in civil conflicts between the 1960s and 1990s.

Cambodia's government has since sought to have stolen antiquities returned.

Damian Williams, the top US federal prosecutor in Manhattan, said the items being returned were sold to Western buyers by Douglas Latchford, a Bangkok dealer who created fake documents to conceal looting and smuggling.

Williams said the antiquities, including a 10th-century sandstone statue depicting the Hindu god of war Skanda riding on a peacock, were voluntarily relinquished by US museums and private collectors.

"These statues and artefacts … are of extraordinary cultural value to the Cambodian people," Williams said.

US prosecutors in 2019 charged Latchford, a dual citizen of Thailand and the US, with wire fraud and smuggling over the alleged looting. He died in Thailand in 2020.

The antiquities will be displayed at the National Museum of Cambodia in Phnom Penh, Cambodia's US ambassador Keo Chhea told Reuters.

In 2014 US federal prosecutors returned the Duryodhana, a looted 10th-century sandstone sculpture, to Cambodia after settling with the Sotheby's auction house.

In 2021, the Manhattan district attorney's office returned 27 looted antiquities to Cambodia.

-Reuters

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