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Asharq Al-Awsat
Asharq Al-Awsat
World
Washington - London - Asharq Al-Awsat

US Returns 3,800 Smuggled Ancient Artifacts to Iraq

An ancient artifact that was illegally smuggled to retailer Hobby Lobby Stores Inc is shown during an event to return several thousand ancient artifacts to Iraq, in this handout photo, in Washington, US, released May 2, 2018. Cori W. Bassett/US Immigration and Customs Enforcement/Handout via REUTERS

About 3,800 artifacts, including items dating to 2100 B.C. that were illegally smuggled to the United States and shipped to a nationwide arts and crafts retailer, have been returned to Iraq.

The items include cuneiform tablets, cylinder seals, and clay bullae. Many of the tablets come from the ancient city of Irisagrig and date back to 2100-1600 BCE, officials said.

Packages of cuneiform tablets were initially intercepted by customs agents and falsely labeled as tile samples for retailer Hobby Lobby, Agence France Presse said.

The company last year agreed to forfeit thousands of ancient Iraqi artifacts and pay $3 million to settle a civil suit brought by the US government, attributing its purchase of the illegally imported items to naivete.

The Department of Justice says thousands of cuneiform tablets and clay bullae were smuggled into the United States via the United Arab Emirates and Israel in packages shipped to the Oklahoma-based company.

AFP quoted Hobby Lobby as saying that it had been acquiring artifacts "consistent with the company's mission and passion for the Bible" with the goal of preserving them for future generations and sharing them with public institutions and museums.

Steve Green, the billionaire evangelical Christian who founded Hobby Lobby, is chairman of the Museum of the Bible, which opened last year in the US capital.

US Attorney Richard Donoghue said Wednesday that US officials "are proud to have played a role in removing these pieces of Iraq's history from the black market of illegally obtained antiquities and restoring them to the Iraqi people."

These pieces "are very important to us and they should be returned home," said Iraq's ambassador to the United States, Fareed Yasseen.

The ceremony, which took place in Washington, was the first US repatriation of cultural property to Iraq since 2015.

Since 2008, the US has returned more than 1,200 items to Iraq, whose cultural property was heavily plundered.

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