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Greece responds to UNESCO marbles mediation rejection

Greek culture minister Nikos Xydakis has responded to the news that his country’s request for mediation [1] over the Parthenon Marbles issue has been rejected [2] by both the British Government and the British Museum.

Part of the Parthenon Marbles, the river god Ilissos in the Duveen Gallery [3]

Part of the Parthenon Marbles, the river god Ilissos in the Duveen Gallery

From:
ABC News (Australia) [4]

Greece condemns British Museum’s refusal to allow mediation over ancient Parthenon sculptures
Posted 28 Mar 2015, 10:02pm

Greece has condemned the British Museum’s decision to reject a UNESCO offer to help resolve a decades-old dispute over returning ancient Parthenon sculptures to Athens.

The sculptures are part of the collection popularly known as the Elgin Marbles which were acquired by Lord Elgin in the early 1800s when he was ambassador to the Ottoman court.

The British parliament purchased the art treasures in 1816 and gave them to the museum.

For the past 30 years, Athens has been demanding the return of the sculptures which had decorated the Parthenon temple on the Acropolis in Athens from ancient times.

“We deplore the categorical refusal by the British of UNESCO’s invitation to launch a mediation process over the Parthenon sculptures housed in the British Museum,” Greek culture minister Nikos Xydakis said.

“The British negativism is overwhelming, along with its lack of respect for the role of mediators.”

The UN cultural agency had offered to mediate between Greece and Britain over the ancient artworks during a meeting in October 2014.

But Sir Richard Lambert, the director of the British Museum, said in a letter to Athens this week that the trustees “decided respectfully to decline this request”.

He said UNESCO’s role was to pursue and safeguard endangered cultural heritage and that “the surviving Parthenon sculptures, carefully preserved in a number of European museums, clearly do not fall into this category”.

“We believe that the more constructive way forward, on which we have already embarked, is to collaborate directly with other museums and cultural institutions, not just in Greece but across the world.”

Sir Richard said the British Museum wanted to continue exploring collaborative ventures directly with Greek institutions – “not on a government-to-government basis”.

For his part, the Greek minister criticised Britain for viewing the dispute as just an issue between museums and not between states.

“We call on Great Britain to reconsider its position,” Mr Xydakis said.

AFP

From:
Sky News (Australia) [5]

Greece condemns UK over sculptures
Published: 4:36 pm, Sunday, 29 March 2015

Greece has criticised the ‘negativism’ of the British Museum in rejecting mediation by UNESCO to help resolve the decades-old dispute over returning ancient Parthenon sculptures to Athens.

The sculptures are part of the collection popularly known as the ‘Elgin Marbles’ which were acquired by Lord Elgin in the early 1800s when he was ambassador to the Ottoman court. The British parliament purchased the art treasures in 1816 and gave them to the museum.

For the past 30 years Athens has been demanding the return of the sculptures which had decorated the Parthenon temple on the Acropolis in Athens from ancient times.

‘We deplore the categorical refusal by the British of UNESCO’s invitation to launch a mediation process over the Parthenon sculptures housed in the British Museum,’ said Nikos Xydakis, a Greek culture minister, in a statement on Saturday.

‘The British negativism is overwhelming, along with its lack of respect for the role of mediators,’ he added.

The UN cultural agency had offered to mediate between Greece and Britain over the ancient artworks during a meeting in October 2014.

But Sir Richard Lambert, the director of the British Museum, said in a letter to Athens this week that at a meeting on March 19 the trustees ‘decided respectfully to decline this request’.

He said UNESCO’s role was to pursue and safeguard endangered cultural heritage and that ‘the surviving Parthenon sculptures, carefully preserved in a number of European museums, clearly do not fall into this category.’

Lambert said the British Museum wanted to continue exploring collaborative ventures directly with Greek institutions – ‘not on a government-to-government basis’.