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257 Looted Benin Artifacts To Be Returned By Oxford, Cambridge In October

The Pitt Rivers Museum in Oxford and the Museum of Archaeology in Cambridge, both in the United Kingdom, have announced that a total of 257 stolen artifacts will be returned to the Nigerian government.

The museums were approached by Prof. Abba Tijani, Director of Nigeria’s National Commission for Museums and Monuments, who claimed the institutions were now ready to repatriate,’ according to The Telegraph UK.

After receiving an official request for their repatriation, museums affiliated with Oxford and Cambridge universities are expected to repatriate their collections of Benin Bronzes within the year, according to Sunday PUNCH.

The Times reported that Cambridge will be ready to return about 160 pieces in July  and that Oxford was “100 per cent willing”, and could repatriate about 97 pieces by October.

They, however, suggested that this process could take longer, but the museum bosses have given their support to the repatriation scheme.

The Nigerian government has been demanding the return of artefacts which were taken by British forces in a 1897 raid on Benin City, before they found their ways into museum collections around the world.

The Director of the MAA, Nicholas Thomas, was quoted by The Telegraph UK, to have said, “The dialogue over the last few years between MAA curators and colleagues in Nigeria has been extraordinarily rewarding.

“We welcome the claim from Nigeria for Museum and Monuments.”

The Director of Pitt Rivers Museum, Laura van Broekhoven also confirmed that the institution had ‘received a claim’ that was now being worked on.

Ada Peter

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