
Stolen artifacts head home: Met repatriates Iraqi art
Shafaq News/ The Metropolitan Museum of Art recently announced that it will return three ancient sculptures to Iraq, dating from 3rd to 2nd millennium BCE. They are estimated to be collectively worth $500,000.
The items are a Sumerian vessel made of gypsum alabaster (ca. 2600–2500 BCE) and two Babylonian terracotta sculptures (ca. 2000-1600 BCE) depicting a male head and a female head, respectively. The museum said it was making the return in 'cooperation with the Manhattan DA's office,' and that the return had come after the Met had 'received new information' amid the investigation into Robin Symes, a dealer accused of being a member of a network that traded in looted artifacts.
A press release from the DA's Office said that the Symes investigation has resulted in the seizure of 135 antiquities valued at more than $58 million. The release also noted that two of the items were seized by the Antiquities Trafficking Unit (ATU) earlier this year.
The two Babylonian ceramic sculptures are thought to be from Isin, an archaeological site in Iraq, and were looted in the late 1960s. The Manhattan DA's office noted that Head of a male was then smuggled out of Iraq and was in Symes's possession in London by 1971. The next year, Symes sold the sculpture to the Met; it remained in the institution's collection until it was seized by the ATU.
Vessel supported by two rams was first offered to the Met in 1956 by Switzerland-based antiquities dealer-trafficker Nicolas Koutoulakis, 'who informed the museum that the Vessel had been found at a site near the ancient Mesopotamian city of Ur. The Vessel then passed through multiple private collectors and dealers, including Symes, before permanently entering The Met's collection in 1989,' according to the Manhattan DA's office.
The museum's press release said the vessel was gifted to the museum in 1989 by the Norbert Schimmel Trust, named after a longtime trustee who died in 1990. The museum noted that 'it appeared on the Baghdad art market, was purchased by Swiss dealer Nicolas Koutoulakis by 1956 and later acquired by Cecile de Rothschild.'
'The Met is committed to the responsible collecting of art and the shared stewardship of the world's cultural heritage and has made significant investments in accelerating the proactive research of our collection,' Max Hollein, the Metropolitan Museum of Art's director and CEO, said in a press statement. 'The Museum is grateful for our ongoing conversations with Iraq regarding future collaborative endeavors, and we look forward to working together to advance our shared dedication to fostering knowledge and appreciation of Iraqi art and culture.'
'We continue to recover and return antiquities that were trafficked by Robin Symes,' District Attorney Alvin L. Bragg, Jr. said in a press statement. 'That is a testament to the hard work of attorneys, analysts and investigators who are committed to undoing the significant damage traffickers have caused to our worldwide cultural heritage.'
H. E. Nazar Al Khirullah, Ambassador of the Republic of Iraq to the US, described the leadership of the ATU as 'instrumental' in the recovery of his country's looted heritage. 'We also appreciate our strong and ongoing partnership with The Met, whose commitment to cultural preservation complements our shared mission to safeguard the world's antiquities,' he said in a press statement.
Symes's legacy of trafficking antiquities includes 351 antiquities returned to Greece after a 17-year legal battle, two antiquities worth $1.26 million returned to Libya, 750 artifacts recovered by Italy, a limestone elephant returned to Iraq, and an alabaster female figure returned to Yemen, all in 2023.
Symes was convicted of contempt of court for lying about antiquities he held in storage locations around the world in 2005. He was sentenced to two years in prison, but only served seven months. He died in 2023.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Shafaq News
an hour ago
- Shafaq News
Al-Deif Brigades claim rocket strike on Israel
Shafaq News/ An armed faction calling itself the 'Martyr Mohammed Al-Deif Brigades' has claimed responsibility for launching two rockets from Syria's Daraa province toward Israeli military positions in the occupied Golan Heights on Tuesday. The group's emergence has raised questions in both Israel and Gaza, with Hamas denying any link to the group, saying it has no knowledge of its formation, leadership, or backing. The Israeli army said the Grad rockets landed in open areas, causing no casualties. In retaliation, Israeli forces launched artillery and air strikes on Syrian territory, targeting areas near the villages of Maariya and Koya in the Yarmouk Basin. Local sources said four Israeli military vehicles entered a position known as Thaknet al-Jazira in western Daraa. Meanwhile, the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported Israeli fighter jets entering Syria's coastal airspace, with drones patrolling skies over Daraa. #عاجل 🔴 قصف جيش الدفاع بالمدفعية في منطقة جنوب سوريا في أعقاب إطلاق القذائف من الأراضي السورية نحو إسرائيل — افيخاي ادرعي (@AvichayAdraee) June 3, 2025 A senior commander of the brigades told Al Jazeera that 'the attacks would continue until Israel halts its strikes on Gaza,' saying they are 'a response to the massacres against the vulnerable in the strip.' Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz warned that Syria's transitional President Ahmed Al-Shraa would be held directly responsible for any threats from Syrian territory. אנו רואים בנשיא סוריה כאחראי ישירות לכל איום וירי לעבר מדינת ישראל והתגובה המלאה תגיע בהקדם. לא נאפשר חזרה למציאות של ה-7 באוקטובר. — ישראל כ'ץ Israel Katz (@Israel_katz) June 3, 2025 Meanwhile, Syria's Foreign Ministry condemned the Israeli strikes, calling them 'a blatant violation of sovereignty' that caused 'heavy human and material losses' in Daraa. It urged the international community to halt what it described as repeated Israeli 'aggression,' while stressing that Syria 'has not and will not be a threat to any party in the region.' Syria also stated that it has not yet confirmed the reports of rocket fire toward Israel. 'Our priority in the south remains to assert the state's authority,' the ministry said, adding that several actors might be seeking to destabilize the region for their own interests.


Memri
12 hours ago
- Memri
Russia-Based American Communist Activist Jackson Hinkle: I Moved to Russia for Free Speech; Western Leftists Are Just Liberals - They Don't Fully Support the Resistance Axis, Its Military, the Men Fig
Russia-Based American Communist activist Jackson Hinkle said that Hizbullah, the Russian military, and North Korean soldiers all fall into the same category, those who fight against the deep state, in an interview posted on May 25, 205 on Mayadeen English on Youtube. He argued that anyone resisting Western imperialism and hegemony is engaged in the same struggle as his comrades in America. He noted that taking such a stance as an American is dangerous, and this was one of the reasons he moved to Russia. Hinkle claimed that there is greater freedom of speech in Moscow than in the United States when it comes to speaking about how the world actually operates. 'I think it's much better to be here,' he said. He also expressed admiration for Iran and the Iranian Revolution. Hinkle criticized Western leftists for being 'liberal-leftists,' rather than true communists or Marxist-Leninists. He described himself as a Stalinist who loves Mao, and said that Western leftists support BDS and economic measures against Israel, but fail to fully back the Axis of Resistance, its military stance, and the men who are putting their lives on the line fighting against the United States. Between February 13 and February 23, 2025, Hinkle traveled with fellow ACP founder Christopher Helali and Russian-American Haz Al-Din to Beirut, where they visited the assassination site of Hizbullah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah, followed by his funeral on February 22. A week earlier, on February 14, Helali and Hinkle were in Qatar, where they interviewed two senior leaders of Hamas, Basem Naim and Osama Hamdan. Hinkle attended the "Palestine: The Central Issue of the Nation" conference alongside Helali. In March, Hinkle traveled to Sana'a, Yemen, where he spoke at the opening session of a conference organized by the Iran-backed Designated terror organization Ansar Allah, a.k.a. the Houthis.


Shafaq News
5 days ago
- Shafaq News
Roadside bomb hits ambulance in Syria's Suwayda: Injuries reported
Shafaq News/ A roadside bomb struck an ambulance in western Suwayda, southern Syria, causing injuries, Syrian media reported on Thursday. The explosion occurred on the remote Areeka–Najran road as the vehicle was reportedly transporting dialysis patients, injuring at least six people. The province has seen repeated clashes in recent months between local and irregular factions. Fighting eased after a security deal with Damascus allowed Suwayda-based forces to integrate into the Syrian General Security Directorate. Last week, armed men stormed the provincial government building, briefly held the governor hostage, and secured the release of a detainee at gunpoint, according to Syria's Ministry of Information.