Stolen bronze statues back in Cairo museum
The tourism and antiquities police have recovered four ancient bronze statuettes stolen from the Egyptian Museum in Cairo and elsewhere, Egypt’s top antiquities body said in a statement.
The artefacts all date to the late period of ancient Egyptian history (688-332 BC), and include two statues of Osiris, god of the afterlife, and two statues of Harpocrates, who represented Egypt’s national patron god Horus as a child.
One statue of Osiris (37.5 cm tall) and one of Horus (18 cm tall), are treasures that were missing from the Egyptian Museum, Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquities said.
The police have returned the statuettes to Egypt’s antiquities ministry, and a committee of archaeologists appointed by antiquities minister Zahi Hawass is now trying to establish which museums or archaeological sites the other two stolen statuettes came from so they can be returned.
The police seized the four statuettes from thieves who they believe stole them during the anti-government unrest that rocked Egypt in late January and led to former president Hosni Mubarak’s resignation on 11 February.
The recovered statuettes bring the total number of objects missing from Cairo’s Egyptian Museum to 31 objects (out of an original total of 54), Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquities said.
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