Close X
Monday, January 13, 2025
ADVT 
International

Australian gallery will not contest India's antique idols claim

Darpan News Desk IANS, 29 Apr, 2014 11:18 AM
    The National Gallery of Australia (NGA) would not contest the Indian government's request for return of antique idols, the Indian high commission said Tuesday.
     
    Tarun Kumar, first secretary in India's high commission in Australia, said he expected a decision to be made regarding the return of the artefacts within a month, Canberra Times reported Tuesday.
     
    He added that the deadline has now passed and it has been reported that the National Gallery of Australia (NGA) and the Art Gallery of New South Wales will not contest the Indian government's request for the return of the idols.
     
    In March, the Indian government formally requested the return of a 900-year-old Dancing Shiva statue from the national gallery and a stone sculpture of the god Ardhanarishvara from the art gallery of NSW, the report said. 
     
    Both the artefacts were bought from the New York-based disgraced Indian-origin antiquities dealer Subhash Kapoor, currently on trial in India.
     
    The artefacts are in the care of the Australian federal government under the Moveable Cultural Heritage Act, a law which allowed the galleries 30 days to challenge India's claims. 
     
    With those claims uncontested, the decision on the future of both statues rests with the Commonwealth, the report said.
     
    The NGA paid $5 million for the Dancing Shiva statue in February 2008. The statue was one of the 22 items it bought from Kapoor's Art of the Past gallery for a total of $11 million between 2002 and 2011.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Mysterious radar plot reported on missing Malaysian airliner

    Mysterious radar plot reported on missing Malaysian airliner
    The multinational search operation to locate the Malaysia Airlines plane that went missing Saturday further expanded Wednesday even as a Malaysian official said that an unidentified object was plotted on military radar that fateful day.

    Mysterious radar plot reported on missing Malaysian airliner

    Two killed several hurt in New York's Harlem explosion

    Two killed several hurt in New York's Harlem explosion
    At least two people were killed and over a dozen injured in a massive explosion that rocked East Harlem here Wednesday morning, media reported.

    Two killed several hurt in New York's Harlem explosion

    Terror link not ruled out in missing Malaysia Airliner mystery: CIA

    Terror link not ruled out in missing Malaysia Airliner mystery: CIA
    The possibility of a terror link cannot be ruled out yet in the " mystery" of the missing Malaysia Airlines flight, John Brennan, director of the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA), said Tuesday.

    Terror link not ruled out in missing Malaysia Airliner mystery: CIA

    Dinosaur skeleton displayed in Dubai mall

    Dinosaur skeleton displayed in Dubai mall
    The fossil, placed at the Grand Atrium in The Dubai Mall, was unveiled for the public Monday. It dates back to the late Jurassic period and is 24.4 metres long and 7.6 metres high

    Dinosaur skeleton displayed in Dubai mall

    No Terror Act In Missing Malaysian Airliner

    No Terror Act In Missing Malaysian Airliner
    The missing Beijing-bound Malaysia Airlines plane could not be traced for the fourth day Tuesday even as the Interpol ruled out a terror hand behind the incident

    No Terror Act In Missing Malaysian Airliner

    More Bad News: Two dead, six missing as boat sinks off Spain

    More Bad News: Two dead, six missing as boat sinks off Spain
    At least two people died and six went missing after a Portuguese fishing boat sank off the northern Spanish coast before dawn Monday, rescuers said.

    More Bad News: Two dead, six missing as boat sinks off Spain