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Egyptian Museum Missing 18 Items After Unrest

JASON KEYSER   02/13/11 11:07 AM ET   AP

Egyptian Museum Items Missing
This undated photo released by the Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities shows a gilded wooden statue of King Tutankhamun harpooning. According to the Ministry of Antiquities a full inventory of the Egyptian Museum has found that looters escaped with 18 items, including this one, during the anti-government unrest.(AP Photo/Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities-HO)

CAIRO — A full inventory of the Egyptian Museum has found that looters escaped with 18 items during the anti-government unrest, including two gilded wooden statues of famed boy king Tutankhamun, the antiquities chief said Sunday.

The 18-day uprising that forced out President Hosni Mubarak engulfed the areas around the museum, on the edge of Cairo's Tahrir Square. On Jan. 28, as protesters clashed with police early on in the turmoil and burned down the adjacent headquarters of Mubarak's ruling party, a handful of looters climbed a fire escape to the museum roof and lowered themselves on ropes from a glass-paneled ceiling onto the museum's top floor.

Around 70 objects – many of them small statues – were damaged, but until Sunday's announcement, it was not known whether anything was missing.

Antiquities Minister Zahi Hawass said the museum's database department determined 18 objects were gone. Investigators searching for those behind the thefts were questioning dozens of people arrested over several days after last month's break-in.

The most important of the missing objects is a limestone statue of the Pharaoh Akhenaten standing and holding an offering table. Akhenaten is the so-called heretic king who tried to introduce monotheism to ancient Egypt.

"It's the most important one from an artistic point of view," said museum director Tarek el-Awady. "The position of the king is unique and it's a beautiful piece of art." During Akhenaten's so-called Amarna period, named after his capital, artists experimented with new styles.

Also gone is a gilded wooden statue of the 18th Dynasty King Tutankhamun, Akhenaten's son, being carried by a goddess. Pieces are also missing from another statue of the boy king wielding a fishing harpoon from a boat.

"We have the boat and the legs of the king, but we are missing other parts of the body," el-Awady said. "We are looking everywhere for them – around the museum, outside, on the roof, from where the thieves got into the museum."

He said none of the missing objects was from the gated room containing the gold funerary mask of Tutankhamun and other stunning items from his tomb in the Valley of the Kings – the museum's chief attractions. The looters did not break into the room, he said.

The other missing items are a statue of Nefertiti making offerings, a sandstone head of a princess and a stone statuette of a scribe from Amarna, a heart scarab and 11 wooden funerary statuettes of the nobleman Yuya.

Antiquities authorities also announced Sunday that thieves broke into a storage site at the royal necropolis of Dahshur, south of Cairo, on Feb. 11. They had no information yet on whether items were missing.

The Egyptian Museum remains closed and guarded by an army unit, but workers are cleaning the vast building and the garden around it. Efforts are being made to improve security.

On Sunday, the museum director and an architect walked around the roof of the 110-year-old building to draw up designs for upgrading security on the glass-paneled sections of the ceiling.

"We can't interfere with the original architecture of the building because it's a monument," el-Awady said. "But we are thinking about how to upgrade this and put in a new security system for the ceiling of the museum."

The security of Egypt's museums and archaeological sites came under scrutiny after the theft in August of a Van Gogh from an art museum in Cairo. El-Awady said the Egyptian Museum's alarms and other security systems were working during the looting.

The thieves caused considerable damage, breaking 13 display cases and tossing aside ancient objects in what museum staff believe was a frenzied search for gold.

"We pray to God that we'll never see another night like this," el-Awady said.

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CAIRO — A full inventory of the Egyptian Museum has found that looters escaped with 18 items during the anti-government unrest, including two gilded wooden statues of famed boy king Tutankhamun,...
CAIRO — A full inventory of the Egyptian Museum has found that looters escaped with 18 items during the anti-government unrest, including two gilded wooden statues of famed boy king Tutankhamun,...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alchemy
09:45 AM on 02/17/2011
Zahi Hawas will hopefully be replaced by a trustee who can safe guard the collection and actually spend the many millions from the traveling Tut exhibitions, the way it was supposed to be spent, on security. His curators are paid roughly $100; per month. He has many properties. Egypt needs a new director of antiquities not linked to the greedy Mubarak clan. Zahi is more concerned with self promotion than first rate scholarship, he is a joke in his Indiana Jones fedora.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
MissMapleLeaf
princesshighandmightytoldyousobossoftheworld
06:52 PM on 02/16/2011
I hope the worst doesn't happen --destruction of the items into tiny pieces because they didn't know what they were or couldn't sell them. The best thing that comes out of this tragic news is that many of the items are so unique that they could never be sold easily. Sure they can be sold to immoral collectors but hopefully that pool is small.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
alchemy
05:36 PM on 02/16/2011
Zahi Hawas is a Mubararak insider who collected millions taking Tut on the road. Why was this money not spent on a first rate security system? Zahi did not spend the night in the museum like the director from Iraq. He is a big self-promoter but does not seem able to pay his curator and employees decent wages. I sure he personally is never left wanting.
11:37 AM on 02/15/2011
Thought I saw one of these in the tchotchke section at the Goodwill on Vermont & Sunset....Anyone grab this junk?
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RoveRoveRoveYourBoat
.....last one out, turn off the lights.
10:57 AM on 02/15/2011
....reminds me of richard j. dailey demolishing
Louis Sullivan's Stock Exchange Building, for a parking lot.
08:41 AM on 02/15/2011
They're in Gamal's Closet. Hawass directed the "thugs" to the loot.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lozange
Aiming around wondrously
10:31 AM on 02/15/2011
OR Mubarak wanted to be buried with them.
03:47 AM on 02/15/2011
Chances are this is a case of opportunistic thief. They simply had the distraction they needed. On the other hand, someone call Colbert! King Tut's penis is missing!
AllyCat7
Snarks need not reply.
01:29 AM on 02/15/2011
The looters are d u m b. They will most likely not be able to see them for money because no one will buy stolen artifacts. Also, why didn't the Egyptian police or army guard the museum from the outset? What a horrible judgment call not to.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
IfIonlyknew
Go ahead....Say something funny.
02:47 PM on 02/16/2011
No one will buy stolen artifacts?
09:15 PM on 02/14/2011
It seems Mr. Hawass has been giving conflicting reports.
Security up to par, nothing missing, nothing taken from field storage facilty sites, all reported on his web-site.
While it does seem suspect, it could just be a result of all the chaos.

In any event, I do hope they recover these treasures. What a shame, were they to be hidden away only for a very few to admire.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lozange
Aiming around wondrously
07:36 AM on 02/15/2011
He posted "Sad News" in re: stolen pieces on his website. It seems like a crime of opportunity. It's unfortunate, especially since Hawass has made it his mission to repatriate so much of antiquities that had been dispersed throughout the world.
11:06 PM on 02/18/2011
Greetings Lozange~ I only just saw your response.
Many thanks for the info
Peace.....
02:59 PM on 02/15/2011
People in Egypt have been calling for him to step down, this morning on Aljazeera he tried to explain his position but ended up yelling at Folly Beh Tibault, the Aljazeera host. I think his time is numbered.
11:11 PM on 02/18/2011
Thx wm1066, just saw your response.
a amn in his position, yelling, makes me think involvment on some level.
Peace
05:40 PM on 02/14/2011
Does anyone think that it may have been an inside job? Egyptian public servants do not make much in salary.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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04:57 AM on 02/15/2011
Zahi Hawas is involved, no question. this isn't the first time things have magically disappeared under his watchful eye.
08:39 AM on 02/15/2011
SECONDED!!!
05:38 PM on 02/14/2011
are they trying to sell this off as a "street vendor" came in and took these items? always the small guy... i'd check the higher ups first. they know what they're dealing with.
05:15 PM on 02/14/2011
Ask Julian Assange to help you out. He likes to deal in stolen material.
05:38 PM on 02/14/2011
or the USA's Obama. He deals in stolen countries.
05:12 PM on 02/14/2011
Not that I have personal experience of fencing antiquities, but this will probably go up the food chain. The thief will get a few thousand euros. The receiver will get tens of thousands of euros, when he passes it to an international syndicate, who will smuggle it out of Egypt. That syndicate will hold it for a while, Switzerland used to be a safe place, then some wealthy snob will pay through the nose for this piece of humanity's heritage. Unlike other looted art, this piece will never be given to a museum because it is just to well known.
05:39 PM on 02/14/2011
You assume it was a peasant who just walked in and took what they wanted. Look at the higher ups. No doubt their bags were full.
07:19 PM on 02/14/2011
Why a peasant? It might easily have been a cleaner or a security guard or some other low paid worker. See above.
AllyCat7
Snarks need not reply.
01:30 AM on 02/15/2011
Sad :-\
03:56 PM on 02/14/2011
http://indonetwork.co.id/pelangi_7
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MidGrounded
03:05 PM on 02/14/2011
In any unrest like what Egypt had there are always people who would profit from mayhem. So no I do not think it was the protesters who wanted freedom...it was the a holes who wanted mayhem!