FRENCH authorities have officially presented Nigeria with the Nok Terracotta artefact that was repatriated after it was intercepted in France while in transit from Togo to the United States in 2008.
Denys Gauer, the French ambassador to Nigeria, officially presented the artefact, a Terracotta figurative sculpture, to the information minister Alhaji Lai Mohammed, at a ceremony to mark the 2016 International Museum Day in Abuja. In his address, the minister thanked the French government for demonstrating the will to fight illegal trafficking of cultural artefacts and urged other countries to emulate France.
Alhaji Mohammed said: “I will like to thank the French ambassador especially for his country’s show of support in our fight against illicit trafficking of cultural goods and their untiring efforts at restitution and return of such items. I wish to recommend this French Model’ to other countries."
He re-emphasised the determination of the President Muhammadu Buhari’s administration to elevate culture and tourism to the mainstream of the economy in its quest to diversify the economy, create wealth and generate employment. Speaking on the theme of the 2016 International Museum Day, Museums and Cultural Landscapes, Alhaji Mohammed said the administration placed a high premium on the development of the nation’s cultural sites and their utilisation as veritable tourism products.
Mr Gauer said the presentation of the Nok Terracotta artefact was in line with the international law and within the framework of the 1970 Unesco Convention aimed at preventing the illicit import and export of ownership of cultural properties, which was ratified by both France and Nigeria. He said the gesture was an illustration of the French policy to fight illegal trade in cultural goods.
The Nok culture appeared in Nigeria around 1000 BC and later vanished under unknown circumstances around 500 AD. It is the earliest producer of life-sized Terracotta in sub-Saharan Africa.