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Workshop
on the illicit Traffic of Cultural Property
Arusha
28 - 29 Sept. 1993
The
participants in the workshop on the fight against illicit
traffic held on September 1993 in Arusha
have reviewed the concerning situation of the African heritage.
The
museum artefacts are stolen and illicitly exported.
The archaeological sites are illegally excavated.
The national heritage from the local communities has been
stolen/or sold to unscrupulous traffickers.
The
consequences are immense and will have adverse effects on
the future of African nations by depriving them of the knowledge
of their past, by removing from the communities the symbols
of their identity.
To
face this situation, the heritage professionals have drafted
a priority policy aimed at fighting against this tragedy.
The main lines of action are:
Systematic
setting of inventories of heritage in and out of museums,
emphasizing the need of visual documentation.
Harmonizing national legislations and ratifying the international
conventions and in particular the UNESCO conventions of
1970 against the illicit traffic.
Reinforcing the collaboration with police and customs service.
Drafting national research, education and information policies
aimed at making the populations, the decision makers and
the general public aware of the value and importance of
cultural heritage.
The
African professionals are aware that these measures cannot
be fully put into practice without the cooperation of professionals
from other parts of the world.
This
is the reason why they urge the support of the international
professional heritage community and other related institutions
and call upon them to eradicate plundering and illicit trafficking
of African heritage.
They
express also the wish that an International fund be urgently
created to finance the acquisition of stolen property and
its restitution to museums and communities when the national
or international legislations do not provide for this.
This
appeal was adopted by the assembly in Arusha on September
29, 1993.
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