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Nigeria's Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed (r), holds the miniature ivory mask from Stuttgart, while German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock (L), and Nigerian Foreign Minister Geoffrey Onyeama, stand behind him, at the Nigerian Foreign Affairs Ministry in Abuja on Tuesday, December 20, 2022. (PHOTO : Annette Riedl/dpa)

Nigeria Welcomes Back Looted Benin Bronzes

Nigeria has welcomed back some of her stolen artefacts as German officials returned 20 of the treasured looted Benin Bronzes on Tuesday at the Nigerian capital Abuja, a move that has attracted international attention amid a debate about returning art looted in the colonial era.

The valuable objects were handed over to Nigeria at a solemn ceremony with German Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock and Culture Minister Claudia Roth.

“It was wrong to steal these bronzes. It was wrong to keep these bronzes. And it is more than overdue for these bronzes to be returned to their homeland,” Baerbock said after a meeting with her Nigerian counterpart, Geoffrey Onyeama, earlier on Tuesday.

“Nigeria, Africa and indeed all of humanity will remember and always cherish the period in human history when Germany stood by us,” Nigeria’s Minister of Information and Culture, Alhaji Lai Mohammed, said after the ceremony.

Twenty or even 10 years ago nobody could have anticipated the return of the works, “because the obstacles to achieve repatriation were seemingly insurmountable,” Lai Mohammed said.

The treasures – looted by colonial powers in the 19th century – previously belonged to collections of museums in Berlin, Hamburg, Cologne, Dresden, Leipzig and Stuttgart.

“This is a story of European colonialism,” in which Germany played “a dark role, causing tremendous suffering in different parts of Africa,” Baerbock said.

The return of the bronzes is “a crucial step towards addressing this chapter in the way that it should be addressed: openly, frankly, with the willingness to critically assess one’s own actions.”

The Green Party politicians were accompanied on their visit by the heads of several museums.

More than 1,100 of the works from the palace of the then kingdom of Benin, which is now part of Nigeria, have so far been in the possession of around 20 German museums. The objects, which are made of ivory and other materials in addition to bronze, mostly come from British looting in 1897.

The five museums now involved and their sponsors had already transferred the ownership rights to all Benin Bronzes prior to the returns. At the same time, the two sides agreed that Germany may keep some of the art treasures out on loan for display in Germany.

“It’s rightfully ours and should be where it belongs, which is here, but nevertheless, we will share it with the world because for us, it is a common human asset,” Foreign Minister Onyeama said.

Nigeria called on other organizations, institutions, museums and private collectors still holding on to Nigerian antiquities to release them.

Lai Mohammed mentioned the British Museum in particular.

“Many of these cultural objects are not mere art to us, but the true essence of our being. These artefacts are not mere the collective works, but our culture and heritage. They belong here and not anywhere else,” Lai Mohammed said.

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