During
last three or four years, I wrote number of articles about criminal
deeds of one man, Subhash Chandra Kapoor, who ran an illegal trading
empire of stealing and smuggling ancient artifacts from India and
other countries to US and then sell these to museums and other buyers
as legally imported items. During last year, when India's prime
minister visited Australia, one of the most glorious bronzes, that of
a dancing Nataraja, again smuggled out by Kapoor, was returned by
that country to the prime minister of India. This brought to light,
another black deed of Kapoor.
This
week, Canada repeated, what Australia did last year and returned a
beautiful, 800 year old, three feet high sandstone sculpture of a
woman holding a parrot, commonly known as Parrot lady. The sculpture
originally adorned the walls of world famous Khajuraho temples and
shows a voluptuous lady with a parrot sitting on her back. She is
considered as the “Naayika” described in Sanskrit literature. The
sculpture turned up in Canada in 2011 in the possession of an
individual who did not have proper documentation It was seized under
rules of the Cultural Property Export and Import, which controls
antiquities and other cultural objects being imported from foreign
states. The sculpture dating back to the 12th century, was returned
in accordance with the 1970 UNESCO Convention, at the Library of
Parliament in Ottawa by Canadian prime minister to India.
Coming
back to criminal deeds of Kapoor, New York Authorities filed an
application last week, with State Supreme Court in Manhattan, seeking
custody of a huge number of artifacts, as having been looted from
India and other places in southern Asia and smuggled into the United
States by the dealer, Subhash Kapoor. It also filed a list of
antiquities that were recovered from shop, storage rooms and assorted
hideaways in Manhattan and Queens, of Kapoor, who ran a high profile
showroom on Madison Avenue.
New
York sleuths broke the case when Mr. Kapoor’s office manager, Aaron
M. Freedman, pleaded guilty in 2013 to six counts of criminal
possession of stolen property valued at $35 million and, according to
his lawyer, helped officials track down some of Mr. Kapoor’s hidden
storage locations.
Mr.
Kapoor’s sister, Sushma Sareen, also pleaded guilty in November
2013 to a misdemeanor charge of obstructing justice and was sentenced
to conditional release. In 2013, she had been charged with receiving
and possessing several million dollars’ worth of ancient bronze
statues, which remain missing. She is also cooperating, according to
investigators.
However
this lot is not everything that Kapoor had managed to smuggle in. US
Federal authorities have also so far identified 18 American museums
as owning a total of 500 items sold or donated by Mr. Kapoor. Several
museums have agreed that they had received the objects illegally and
have them returned since. Some museums keep holding the objects
saying that these were legally acquired.
Kapoor
is currently awaiting trial in India on charges of plundering
archaeological sites and conspiring with black market traders to send
illicit artifacts overseas. American officials are planning to
extradite him after his case is settled.
Kapoor's
action in plundering great cultural heritage of India in such
unbelievably large quantities, is such a serious and heinous crime
that he must receive harshest punishment prescribed by law.
20th
April 2015
I wonder how long this criminal has been in this business. Certainly he deserves harshest punishment.
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