27 February 2013
http://www.france24.com
A Cambodian boy looks at the Prasat Chen temple in the Koh Ker
area on May 14, 2012. For a year, an ancient Cambodian statue of a
warrior has been at the center of a legal battle in New York in which US
authorities back Cambodia's claim that the artwork was looted. A US
lawyer has visited the temple as part of a legal bid to force auction
house Sotheby's to forfeit the statue.
AFP - A US lawyer visited a Cambodian temple Wednesday as
part of a legal bid to force auction house Sotheby's to forfeit a 10th
century Khmer statue so it can be returned to the country, officials
said.
Assistant US Attorney Sharon Levin, who heads the asset forfeiture
office, visited the northern Koh Ker temple to see the pedestal of the
contested sandstone statue known as the Duryodhana, said government
spokesman Ek Tha.
"She led a delegation to collect more data at the site in Koh Ker
temple where the statue was looted," he told AFP, adding that Levin had
also met officials working on the case since arriving in Phnom Penh on
Sunday.
The ancient Cambodian statue of a warrior is at the centre of a legal battle in New York.
Cambodia claims the artwork was looted and US authorities filed a
civil complaint last April against Sotheby's, blocking them from selling
the item.
"Her visit will help build a stronger case that the statue belongs to Cambodia," Ek Tha added.
The US Attorney's office said in a statement last year that the
Duryodhana statue was "stolen from the Prasat Chen temple at Koh Ker in
Cambodia".
"The Koh Ker site is very significant (and) the Duryodhana is
considered to be a piece of extraordinary value to the Cambodian people
and part of their cultural heritage," the statement said.
A court then ordered Sotheby's, which insists the statue valued at
$2-3 million can be sold legitimately, not to sell or transfer the work.
Sotheby's is currently holding onto the work but its future is unclear.
The row began in early 2011 shortly before a planned March 24
auction, when Cambodia's government sent a letter through UNESCO
claiming ownership of the 10th century work. Sotheby's stopped the sale.
"Cambodian ancestors built the statues for its cultural value, not to
sell it," said Ek Tha, adding that Cambodian officials believed the
statue was looted in 1972 during the country's civil war.
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