No 10 rules out law change for return of
Parthenon marbles
No plans to amend legislation that could stop removal
back to Greece, after secret talks held over their future
Pippa
Crerar Political editor
@PippaCrerar
Mon 5 Dec
2022 16.26 GMT
Rishi Sunak
has ruled out changing a law that could prevent the British Museum from handing
the Parthenon marbles back to Greece, after it emerged that trustees have held
secret talks with the Greek prime minister about the future of the artefacts.
The prime
minister’s official spokesperson said there were no plans to amend legislation
under which a museum can dispose of objects within its collection only in very
limited circumstances. However, it could decide to lend part of the collection
to Greece.
The British
Museum has said it wants a “new Parthenon partnership with Greece” but that it
operates within the law “and we’re not going to dismantle our great collection
as it tells a unique story of our common humanity”.
The former
chancellor George Osborne, the chair of the British Museum, has been holding
talks with the Greek prime minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, since November 2021
over the possible return of the sculptures, according to the Greek daily
newspaper Ta Nea.
However,
Sunak’s official spokesperson said: “We have no plans to change the law, which
prevents removing objects from the British Museum’s collection apart from in
certain circumstances.
“Our
position on this hasn’t changed. Decisions relating to the care and management
of the collections are a matter for the museum and its trustees. The Parthenon
sculptures are legally owned by the trustees and operationally independent of
the government.”
The marbles
– which decorated the 2,500-year-old Parthenon temple at the Acropolis in
Athens – were taken by Lord Elgin in the early 19th century when he was British
ambassador to the Ottoman empire, and they have been the subject of a
long-running dispute over where they should be displayed.
As well as
the controversy over the marbles, in recent weeks the Horniman Museum in south
London has returned looted bronzes from Benin City to Nigeria, and the Wellcome
Collection closed its Medicine Man gallery because it “perpetuates a version of
medical history that is based on racist, sexist and ableist theories and
language”.
Downing
Street said the public would “vote with their feet” if they disliked museums
removing controversial objects from their collections.
“I’m
cautious about commenting about how specific museums should display their
collections; I think that is rightly a matter for them,” the spokesperson said.
“Clearly they will need to justify any decisions made to the public and the
public will make a judgment based on voting with their feet on whether they
think they’ve got the right balance.”
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