Togo adopts bills to better fight illicit trafficking of cultural property

Economic governance
Tuesday, 14 August 2018 11:36
Togo adopts bills to better fight illicit trafficking of cultural property

(Togo First) - Togo’s parliament adopted at the end of last week two bills to fight illicit trafficking of cultural property.

The first bill allows the ratification of the convention that concerns measures to take to ban and prevent illicit import, export and transfer of cultural property; a convention adopted on November 17, 1970, in Paris.

The second bill greenlights Togo’s adhesion to Unidroit’s convention on stolen or illegally exported cultural goods, adopted on June 24, 1995, in Rome.

The first convention which came into effect in 1972, aims to fight illicit trade of cultural property through international cooperation. This should protect national heritage and ensure good ethics in trading cultural property generally, and artwork especially.

Now that this convention has been ratified, Togo should properly combat theft in museums and religious facilities, looting of archeologic sites or scattering of valuable collections. As for Unidroit’s convention, it will ease repatriation of cultural property to their country of origin.

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