Germany to return 1,130 looted Benin Bronzes to Nigeria – Lai Mohammed
Nigeria’s Information and Culture Minister Lai Mohammed says Nigeria has signed an agreement with Germany for the repatriation of over 1,130 looted Benin Bronze artifacts back to the country.
The Minister disclosed this in an interview with the News Agency of Nigeria in Washington DC, United States on Tuesday.
This was after three museums in the US repatriated 31 Benin Bronze artefacts to Nigeria.
He commended the German Government for that effort, adding that Nigeria is also getting positive response from France and Mexico to return some of its stolen artefacts.
In 1897 during a British raid on Benin, the royal palace was torched and looted, and the oba (ruler) was exiled.
The British confiscated all royal treasures, giving some to individual officers and taking most to auction in London.
The estimated 3,000 objects eventually made their way into museums and private collections around the world.
The Minister said the world had seen that it was an ethical and moral issue to return the artefacts to their owners, noting that it is not a matter of law as claimed by the British Government.
Mohammed said: ““This is important for the British Museum to understand and for the British Government to know, because I was also in the British Museum to ask them to return thousands of the artefacts in its custody.
“The standard response is that until the British Parliament changes the status, they are not in position to so do.
“The US and Germany are now seeing that this matter is not of law, but of morality.
“It is about doing the right thing.
“I hope that the British Government will also learn from the two countries and do same.”
According to Mohammed, Nigeria is planning to sign an agreement with the British Government on November 28 to return about 86 other artefacts from various museums in UK.
The Minister told NAN that the campaign of the current administration for the return of and restitution of Nigeria’s looted/smuggled artefacts from around the world, which was launched in November 2019, …