Monday, April 29, 2024

Nigeria, US to sign agreement on cultural property trafficking

Uba Group

The Federal Government of Nigeria and the United States of America have agreed to sign a bilateral agreement stopping illicit trafficking in cultural property and artefacts.

The Minister of Information and Culture, Lai Mohammed, disclosed this in Washington DC after a meeting with the US acting Assistant Secretary of State on Education and Culture, Mathew Lussenhop.

Briefing the News Agency of Nigeria after the meeting, the minister said the agreement, which would be signed in Nigeria soon, would expand cooperation between the two countries in the area of cultural property.

Specifically, the minister said that the agreement would prevent stolen artefacts in Nigeria from getting into the US to prevent the type of experience passed through in retrieving the looted Benin bronzes from Germany.

He said the agreement included capacity building for Nigerians noting that the country was the second in Africa to enter into it with the US after Mali.

“We agree on the final draft of the MoU which will be ready after vetting by our Ministry of Justice, and anytime soon, there will be a signing ceremony in Nigeria.

“The agreement is to prevent artefacts and cultural property that people want to illicitly ship to the US.

“In addition to artefacts, the agreement also extends to illicit drug trafficking and the FBI is involved,’’ he said.

Mohammed added that there were few stolen artefacts that Nigeria was expecting mostly from private museums in the US.

“They have invited us and the National Commission for Museum and Monument is working hard on this.

“In particular, there are about two or three private collectors who had voluntarily surrendered the artefacts which they believed were either illegally trafficked or stolen from Nigeria,’’ he said.

The minister recalled that he was in Germany in July on the trail of thousands of artefacts looted from Benin Kingdom during the 1897 British expedition

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