Wednesday 25 February 2009

Beijing: Stop sale of relics


Feelings run high as French court gives the nod for auction today

1 comment:

Guanyu said...

Beijing: Stop sale of relics

Feelings run high as French court gives the nod for auction today

25 February 2009

BEIJING - A French court’s refusal to halt the auction of two Chinese imperial bronzes yesterday provoked an outpouring of nationalist sentiment among netizens here as the government made a formal call for the scrapping of the sale.

Despite the court’s ruling, a group of more than 80 Chinese lawyers pledged to take further measures to block the auction of the Qing dynasty sculptures which are scheduled to be sold in Paris today.

‘The State Administration of Cultural Heritage has formally informed the auctioneer of our strong opposition to the auction, and clearly demanded its cancellation,’ Mr. Ma Zhaoxu, a Foreign Ministry spokesman, told a regular press briefing yesterday.

To stop auction house Christie’s from putting the two relics under the hammer, the lawyers had filed an application with a Paris court last Thursday under the name of an association representing Chinese cultural interests.

The bronze rabbit and rat heads, looted by foreign troops from Beijing’s imperial Summer Palace almost 150 years ago, were part of the late fashion designer Yves Saint Laurent’s private estate which is being sold off by his long-time partner Pierre Berge.

The lawyers argued their case before the court on Monday morning in Paris, just hours before the start of the three-day auction. Christie’s brought in a seven-member legal team to counter the motion, according to Chinese state media.

In the evening, the judge ruled that the Association for the Protection of Chinese Art in Europe was not entitled to file the injunction as it did not have direct links to the two sculptures, said the official Xinhua news agency. The association was ordered to pay &yen1,000 (S$1,950) in fines each to the auction house and to Mr. Berge’s firm.

The two relics are expected to fetch up to US$13 million (S$20 million) each.

The judgment yesterday enraged Chinese netizens and prompted stern rebukes in the Chinese media, complicating high-level efforts to mend relations between China and France which have soured in the past year over Tibet.

Mr. Berge raised hackles in China when he told French radio last week that he would give them back to China if Beijing would ‘observe human rights and give liberty to the Tibetan people and welcome the Dalai Lama’. Mr. Ma of China’s Foreign Ministry yesterday dismissed Mr. Berge’s offer to exchange the sculptures for human rights concessions as ‘absurd’.

Chinese Internet users threatened to boycott French goods, demanded the breaking-off of diplomatic ties between China and France, and urged Chinese people who have spent millions buying back pilfered cultural relics not to ‘put money into the hands of the French’ by bidding for the sculptures.