| Workshop
on the Illicit Traffic of Cultural Property
Bamako 12 - 14 Oct.
1994
Museum professionals,
police and customs officers who met during the regional Workshop on the
struggle against illicit traffic in cultural property in Bamako
from 12 to 14 October 1994,
Having in mind the
Appeal launched in Arusha, in September 1993, by their colleagues from
eastern and southern Africa,
Are launching a solemn
Appeal to international organizations, decision makers and the greater
public in order to stop the haemorrhaging of cultural heritage from Africa.
The participants defined
strategies whose application should impede this disaster:
- The participants
announce the launching by museums of awareness and training activities
for police and customs officers in order to allow them to better identify
protected cultural objects, and with a view to the creation of specialized
customs and police services. They request ICOM and UNESCO to prepare
a handbook and teaching materials to this effect.
- They propose the
creation in each country of a flexible structure associating museums,
police and customs in order to facilitate the urgent transmission of
information on stolen cultural objects to INTERPOL and the regional
liaison office of the Customs Cooperation Council.
- Museum professionals
undertake to cooperate with local communities, schools and media in
order to increase public awareness of the necessity to protect and preserve
the cultural heritage.
- Participants ask
for the organization, as soon as possible, of a summit of Ministers
of Culture of African countries on the problem of illicit traffic. They
also ask that the issue be placed on the agenda of the next Conference
of the Organization for African Unity, namely in order to invite African
countries which have not yet adopted an appropriate legislation to do
so, and also in order to invite African States and countries importing
cultural objects from Africa which are not yet States parties to the
UNESCO 1970 Convention against illicit traffic to ratify this instrument
without delay.
- To this end, they
recommend to the States in the region to fully utilize the mechanisms
of international cooperation provided by that Convention, following
the example of Mali which has submitted with success to the USA a request
for the ban of import into the USA of cultural objects illegally exported
from Mali. They also support the preparation of a UNIDROIT draft convention.
- They request ICOM
and UNESCO to send missions to the African countries which are in situations
of armed conflict with a view to taking urgent measures to safeguard
cultural objects which are threatened.
- In case of thefts
or illegally exported cultural property, information on these objects
being necessary for their recovery, the participants request that special
efforts be undertaken at national level and with international cooperation
in order that museums, researchers and archaeologists can receive sufficient
resources for the preparation of inventories and documentation, and
for the protection of archaeological and excavation sites.
- They recommend
the strict application of the ICOM Code of Ethics as far as collection and acquisitions
are concerned and they suggest the study of a Code of Ethics for archaeological
and anthropological research and they are launching an appeal to specialized
laboratories in order to forbid dating and other analysis which could
valorize objects of dubious origin.
- They insist on
regional cooperation between museums and their professionals to share
information and undertake common policies for research and exhibitions.
They are requesting that this Appeal be officially presented to the
Council of Ministers of ECOWAS (Economic Community of West African States)
and of the Arab Maghreb Union.
Bamako, October
14, 1994 
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