(*100*)During an interplay with members of the Indian-American group on the Ronald Reagan Centre in Washington DC, Modi mentioned, “I’m completely satisfied that the American authorities has determined to return greater than 100 Indian antiquities that had been stolen from us. These antiquities might have gotten to the worldwide market in several methods – some authorized, some unlawful. I categorical my gratitude to the American authorities for returning these things.”

(*100*)The Indian Express had reported on March 14, following an investigation in collaboration with the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) and UK-based Finance Uncovered, that the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York had at the least 77 antiquities in its catalogue linked to jailed smuggler Subhash Kapoor. The Met mentioned final month that 16 of those antiquities had been returned to India.
(*100*)The Archaeological Survey of India (ASI) mentioned in a reply dated June 15 to an RTI software filed by The Indian Express that “a mail has been acquired from the Ministry of External Affairs by means of the Ministry of Culture within the month of May 2023. All efforts are being taken to retrieve the artwork objects and the matter is in progress.”
(*100*)A senior ASI official mentioned on Saturday that “authentication of round 120 Indian antiquities within the US is accomplished, and the authentication of extra antiquities is underway. I can’t touch upon which antiquities precisely are coming now and which can come later.”
(*100*)Days after The Indian Express revealed the stories on the antiquities within the Met’s catalogue, the New York Supreme Court on March 22 issued a search warrant in opposition to the museum, with Justice Felicia Mennin giving 10 days to the New York Police Department or any agent of the Department of Homeland Security to seize the antiquities and convey them earlier than the courtroom.
(*100*)On March 30, the museum issued a press release that it might “switch 15 sculptures for return to the federal government of India, after having discovered that the works have been illegally faraway from India”. It mentioned that “the entire works have been bought at one level by Subhash Kapoor, a seller at the moment serving a jail sentence in India.”
(*100*)Museum director Max Hollein issued a press release on May 9, saying that “final month, in mild of latest provenance data, we returned 16 works to India, together with the Celestial Dancer, a sculpture that enraptured guests for many years”. The Met additionally introduced an “intensive assessment of its assortment”.
(*100*)The Celestial Dancer is an Eleventh-century sandstone sculpture of an “Apsara” from Madhya Pradesh. It is valued at greater than $1 million. The sculpture was amongst those who had hyperlinks to Kapoor, who’s serving a 10-year jail time period in Tamil Nadu.
(*100*)Antiquities which can be returned are often handed over to Indian authorities overseas — missions or High Commissions – after which the MEA informs the Ministry of Culture, which coordinates with the ASI, which is the custodian for such repatriated objects. The ASI then sends a workforce to confirm and doc the objects, following which a choice is taken about their bodily return to India.
(*100*)A grievance filed in July 2019 in a New York courtroom by Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) had said that the “complete worth of stolen antiquities identified to have been trafficked by Kapoor exceeds $145.71 million”.
(*100*)Kapoor, described by the US Department of Homeland Security as “probably the most prolific commodities smugglers on the planet”, was arrested in Frankfurt on October 30, 2011, and extradited to India in July 2012.
(*100*)On November 1, 2022, he was sentenced to 10 years in jail by a courtroom in Tamil Nadu’s Kumbakonam on fees of housebreaking and unlawful export of idols belonging to the Varadharaja Perumal temple in Kanchipuram. He is at the moment serving his sentence in Trichy jail. Kapoor faces fees within the US as nicely for smuggling idols and artefacts from Asia.

























