Greece in ‘preliminary’ talks with British Museum
about Parthenon marbles
Officials say they have met with George Osborne, and
are keen to see the masterpieces back in Athens
Helena
Smith in Athens
Sat 3 Dec
2022 17.09 GMT
Senior
Greek officials have been in “preliminary” talks with the British Museum in
what could amount to a tectonic shift in resolving the world’s longest-running
cultural dispute: the repatriation of the 5th-century BC Parthenon marbles to
Athens.
Revelations
about the negotiations were first reported on Saturday by Ta Nea, which said
that officials including the Greek prime minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, had met
George Osborne, the chair of the British Museum, in a five-star London hotel as
recently as Monday.
Insiders in
Athens described the report, which gave a blow-by-blow account of where the talks
had been conducted, as “not only credible but very exciting”.
“It is true
there is a dialogue between the Greek government and the British Museum,” the
country’s minister of state Giorgos Gerapetritis told the Guardian. “Right now,
they are preliminary talks and, yes, I have met the British Museum’s chair,
George Osborne” [to discuss the issue].
The news
came five days after Mitsotakis told an audience at the London School of
Economics that he “sensed” headway was being made on the issue and that a
“win-win solution” was possible.
“We have
seen progress,” said the Greek leader, who has made reunification of the
classical statuary with the carvings that have remained in Athens a cultural
priority. “I do sense a momentum.”
The row
over the marbles – removed in contentious circumstances by Lord Elgin, who was
ambassador at the time to the Ottoman empire of which present-day Greece was
then a part – has raged for more than 200 years.
The British
Museum acquired the antiquities, which include 75 metres of the Parthenon’s
original 160-metre-long frieze, in 1816 when, bankrupt, despondent and racked
by syphilis, the diplomat was forced to part with them.
Elgin, who
had initially hoped to adorn his Scottish estate with the treasures, maintained
he had been granted a “firman” by Ottoman authorities that permitted his agents
in Athens to dismantle the pieces. It has since come to light that much of the
statuary was violently detached, with slabs now in the British Museum’s
possession hacked from the monument with the use of saws.
Ta Nea
reported that the first of several behind-the-scenes meetings had taken place
in London between Osborne and Mitsotakis in 2021 when the Greek premier made
the marbles the centrepiece of Downing Street talks with his then counterpart
Boris Johnson.
The former
chancellor had then followed up with further discussions, meeting Gerapetritis
and the Greek foreign minister Nikos Dendias in London.
“At least
two of those meetings were held at the Greek ambassador’s residence in Mayfair.
Another one was held as recently as this week at a hotel in Knightsbridge,”
wrote the paper’s London correspondent, Yannis Andritsopoulos.
“The
discussions have been kept out of the public eye. The chair of London’s largest
museum first visited the [Greek] ambassador’s residence, at 51 Upper Brook
Street, in mid-November 2021, to hold ‘exploratory talks’ with Mitsotakis about
the fate of the 2,500-year-old sculptures.”
Negotiations,
it said, further evolved this week when Osborne visited the Berkeley hotel in
Knightsbridge to meet the Greek premier “a year after their first secret
encounter”.
The dispute
over ownership of the sculptures has descended into acrimony, with the Greek
culture minister accusing Elgin of committing a “blatant act of serial theft”.
As the
rhetoric has intensified, campaigners, backed by growing support among Britons
for their return, have piled the pressure on London’s premier cultural institution
to alter its stance.
“Clever
politicians listen to their people,” said Nikos Stampolidis, the Greek academic
who heads the Acropolis Museum at the foot of the Periclean site. “If there
were a solution, Britain could be the protagonists of an ethical empire because
this transcends our countries. If the marbles were reunited here in Athens,
within view of the greatest symbol of democracy, it would be a great act for
humanity.”
Gerapetritis
conceded that the talks were aimed as much at “establishing principles” [of
discussion] as ameliorating the increasingly toxic atmosphere that had arisen
on the issue. Both sides, he said, were aware of their “red lines” and a deal
was far from close.
“Although
there is a common understanding, a lot of details have yet to be worked out,”
added the minister, who described Mitsotakis as giving him a mandate to pursue
further talks.
Asked about
his face-to-face talks with Osborne, he insisted: “The discussions are not very
specific. Rather, we are trying to establish a good channel of dialogue.”
In August,
the British Museum’s deputy director, Jonathan Williams, announced that the
institution was eager to “change the temperature of the debate” after Unesco
ruled it imperative that the affair was discussed at an inter-government level.
“There is
space for a really dynamic and positive conversation with which new ways of
working together can be found,” Williams told the Sunday Times.
A statement
issued by the British Museum said the talks were part of efforts to create “a
new Parthenon partnership with Greece”.
“We’ll talk
to anyone, including the Greek government, about how to take that forward. We
operate within the law and we’re not going to dismantle our great collection as
it tells a unique story of our common humanity. But we are seeking new
positive, long-term partnerships with countries and communities around the
world, and that of course includes Greece.”
In the past
Mitsotakis’s centre-right government has proposed giving the UK a rotating
exhibition of antiquities never before shown outside Greece in return for the
Parthenon sculptures.
“There are
a lot of red lines: the 1963 deaccession act for the British Museum,
acknowledgment of British ownership [of the marbles] for us,” said the
politician, explaining that Athens would never accept repatriation of the
masterpieces as a loan.
“There is
still a long way to go but we will go on with our discussions. It’s very good
that we are now trying to establish a much broader cooperation with the British
Museum, one that not only involves classical antiquities but Byzantine
treasures that we would be willing to send.”
No comments:
Post a Comment