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The recovered broken statue of Akhenaten's daughter (Tutankhamun's sister) from Mallawi Museum [Credit: Egypt's Heritage Task Force f/b page] |
The statuette was the highlight of the museum in the city of Mallawi, near the archaeological remains of the new capital established by Tutankhamun's father Akhenaten in the 14th Century BC.
Egyptian police and Unesco put out an alert through Interpol and to international museums and dealers after the museum was smashed and looted during Islamist riots protesting the overthrow of the Muslim Brotherhood president, Mohammed Morsi, in August.
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The statuette before it was looted [Credit: Malawi Museum] |
A statement by the ministry gave few details of how the statuette came to be recovered, saying that police had been "guided" to its hiding place in Cairo by a group of "accused". However, it said that of the more than 1,000 exhibits originally stolen, 800 had now been recovered or returned.
In an interview with The Telegraph last month, the police officer leading the investigation, Col Abdulsamie Farghali, said that some of the objects retrieved had been found through "negotiations" with powerful local families.
A number of clans of antiquities smugglers are known to operate in the area, and have long-established connections to the international black market in such objects. Because of their distinctive style, and connection to Tutankhamen, relics of the era of Akhenaten fetch the highest prices.
Miss Hanna said: "I'm very glad that they finally found it."
Author: Richard Spencer | Source: The Telegraph [December 08, 2013]