WORLD / AFRICA
Germany hands over looted artifacts to Namibia, but on loan basis
Published: May 31, 2022 06:16 PM
Photo taken on Jan. 16, 2022 shows tourists visiting Dune 45 of Sossuvlei at the Namib-Naukluft National Park in Namibia. Namibia recorded an increase of 37.81 percent of tourists arrivals in the country from January to December 2021, when compared to 2020 figures, an official said Tuesday. (Photo: Xinhua)

Photo taken on Jan. 16, 2022 shows tourists visiting Dune 45 of Sossuvlei at the Namib-Naukluft National Park in Namibia. Namibia recorded an increase of 37.81 percent of tourists arrivals in the country from January to December 2021, when compared to 2020 figures, an official said Tuesday. (Photo: Xinhua)

Namibia on Monday took delivery of 23 ancient pieces of jewelry, tools and other objects pillaged during colonial rule, and returned as an indefinite loan from Germany.

The return of the artifacts is part of a project to encourage rapprochement between the two nations.

"All the artifacts were collected during the Germany colonial era from different Namibian communities," said the Museum Association of Namibia chairwoman, Hilma Kautondokwa.

The returned items were taken mostly between the 1860s and the early 1890s, she said. Hundreds of other objects remain in Germany.

The items were handed over to the National Museum of Namibia by the Germany's Ethnological Museum of the Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation.

They were immediately put up for public exhibition and will be available to local academics for research.

In May 2021, Germany acknowledged it had committed genocide in colonial-era Namibia and promised 1 billion euros ($1.07 billion) in financial support to descendants of the victims.

Activists have rejected the offer as insufficient for the atrocities that have poisoned relations between Namibia and Germany for decades.

The return of the 23 artifacts came after three years of talks between Berlin's Ethnological Museum and the National Museum of Namibia.

Activists in Namibia have also questioned why Germany opted to loan the looted artifacts as opposed to simply handing them back.

The Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation president, Hermann Parzinger, gave a "guarantee... that these objects will stay in Namibia."

The return of the artifacts is the latest move in response to mounting calls in Africa for Western countries to hand back colonial spoils from their museums.

AFP