Prosecutors have announced that an
order issued last week to seize an ancient Greek statue for
years disputed by Italy and the Getty Museum in Malibu is
"immediately executive".
"The Lysippus statue must return to Italy," prosecutors told
ANSA on Thursday, accompanied by Tristano Tonnini, the lawyer
for the association "Cento Città", which has been fighting the
legal battle for 11 years.
"We expect politicians to play their part," they said.
The Italian judge rejected an appeal by the Getty Museum,
ruling that the fourth-century BC Greek statue - known as
Lysippus after its creator and fished out of the sea off Pesaro
in 1964 - must be seized wherever in the world it is.
Commonly referred to as the Getty Bronze and formally named
Statue of a Victorious Youth, the statue is one of the
best-known works in the Los Angeles-based museum.
The Lysippus has been contested ever since the Getty bought
it for almost four million dollars in 1977 from German art
dealer Herman Heinz Herzer, paying nearly 800 times the $5,600
that Italian dealers paid the fishermen for it in 1964.
Italy has long claimed the statue was smuggled out of the
country and has demanded that the Getty hand it back.
Lawyer Tonnini said he was satisfied by the judge's ruling,
but said he is also convinced that "the California museum always
knew that it was buying a smuggled and illegally exported
artifact".
Pesaro prosecutor Cristina Tedeschini said she expects the
case will go to the Italian Supreme Court of Cassation.
"But the fact is that three different judges have reaffirmed
that the statue belongs to the Italian state and that it must be
given back," Tedeschini said.
In November 2007, a court in Fano, near Pesaro, cleared the
Getty Museum of wrongdoing in the case.
But on Thursday, prosecutor Silvia Cecchi said the judge
"affirmed that the statue was taken in Italian national waters
and therefore belongs to Italy," which has been the sustained
argument since 2007 to get the statue back.
"It must be very clear that the order is immediately
executive and we will apply this principle by notifying the
American authorities," Cecchi said.
On Friday the Getty said it would lodge an appeal at the
Cassation Court to "defend our rights".
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