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更多 发布于:2018-12-12 23:18
Dutch Court Throws Out Case of Disputed Buddha Statue


Dec. 12, 2018

THE HAGUE, Netherlands — A court in Amsterdam has refused to resolve a legal dispute over ownership of a Buddha statue that contains the mummified remains of a monk.(章公祖师肉身坐佛)

The civil court in Amsterdam threw out the case Wednesday, saying in a written ruling that two Chinese village committees seeking ownership of the disputed statue are not legal entities and are therefore ineligible to file a claim.

The villages, identified by the court as Yangchun and Dong Pu in southeastern Fujian province, say that a statue containing the remains of an 11th-century monk was stolen from their shared temple in 1995 and wound up in the collection of a Dutch art dealer.

The court says the dealer denies that the disputed statue is the stolen antiquity.

The villages can appeal the ruling(村里可以对裁决提起上诉).

Dec. 12, 2018 By The Associated Press
Dutch Court Throws Out Case of Disputed Buddha Statue
https://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2018/12/12/world/europe/ap-eu-netherlands-buddha-dispute.html
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    发布于:2018-12-12 23:54
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    发布于:2018-12-13 00:56
    Dutch court throws out case of disputed Buddha statue
    Dutch court refuses to resolve long-running ownership dispute of a 1,000-year-old Buddha statue that contains a mummified monk




    By Associated Press and Afp and Tracy You For Mailonline
    Published: 12:51 GMT 12 Dec 2018, updated 16:40 GMT 12 Dec 2018
    • Villagers from Fujian, China, claimed the statue was stolen from their temple
    • They demand the return of the figure which was bought by a Dutch collector
    • Amsterdam court threw out the case today due to the ineligibility of the plaintiff
    • Collector previously claimed in a hearing that he no longer had the statue

    A court in Amsterdam has refused to resolve a long-running international dispute over the ownership of a 1,000-year-old Buddha statue that contains the mummified remains of a monk.
    Residents of two Chinese villages accuse that the human-size holy figure had been stolen from their temple before being bought by a Dutch collector.

    The villagers demand the statue be returned to them.  

    A court in Amsterdam threw out the case involving a golden Buddha statue (pictured) today

    The civil court in Amsterdam threw out the case today, saying in a written ruling that two Chinese village committees seeking ownership of the disputed statue are not legal entities and are therefore ineligible to file a claim.

    In China, a village committee is elected from the residents and typically deals with the internal affairs of the village, such as domestic quarrels, security and the development of the community.

    It could also represent the village - and in some cases individuals who live in the village - to the public. However, it does not have legal powers.

    The Chinese villages, identified by the court as Yangchun and Dong Pu in southeastern Fujian province, say that the statue was stolen from their shared temple in 1995 and was purchased by Dutch art dealer Oscar van Overeem in Hong Kong in 1996.

    The court says the collector denies that the disputed statue is the stolen antiquity. The collector, Van Overeem, said in a hearing in October that he did not have the statue anymore.

    The villages can appeal against the ruling.

    Mummified monk stolen from a village in Fujian Province, China

    In October, the Chinese villagers appeared at the Amsterdam District Court and made a passionate plea during a hearing for the return of the golden statue.

    'We grew up with the statue. He was there day and night. He is our spiritual leader,' Yangchun village spokesman Lin Wenqing said shortly after lawyers closed their arguments.

    'For us, it is the most important thing to have him back,' said Lin, 42, through an interpreter. He was one of six villagers who had travelled from Yangchun to attend the hearing in the Dutch capital.

    The statue at the centre of the case depicts a roped monk in a sitting position and measures 1.2 metres tall (3.93 feet).

    A scan of the statue in February, 2015, revealed a skeleton inside - said to be that of a Chinese monk who lived nearly a millennium ago during China's Song dynasty (960-1279).

    Controversy about the Buddha arose the same year when a villager of Yangchun saw the statue on TV as it was being displayed at the Hungarian Natural History Museum in Budapest.

    The statue was subsequently withdrawn from the exhibition.

    A scan  in 2015 revealed a skeleton inside the human-size statue, which dated back 1,000 years        +5
    A scan in 2015 revealed a skeleton inside the human-size statue, which dated back 1,000 years
    The villagers claim the mummified body is that of Zhanggong Zushi, a local monk who helped treat disease and spread Buddhist belief. When he died at the age of 37, his body was mummified and placed inside the statue.

    After the statue was stolen in 1995, the only things left behind were the hat and clothes which are still in the temple, according to the villagers.

    They said they were convinced that the statue which Van Overeem bought was their missing idol.

    'There is a very special bond between the villagers and the statue,' their lawyer Jan Holthuis told the judges.

    The Chinese villagers claim the statue was stolen from their temple in south-east China in 1995 and was bought by Dutch collector Oscar van Overeem in Hong Kong a year later        +5
    The Chinese villagers claim the statue was stolen from their temple in south-east China in 1995 and was bought by Dutch collector Oscar van Overeem in Hong Kong a year later
    In 2015, Mr van Overeem said he bought the statue for 40,000 guilders (around £16,000) in 1996 from another collector, who had acquired it from a Chinese artist friend in late 1994 or early 1995, according to a report on DutchNews.

    But Van Overeem again reiterated in court in October that he did not have the statue, which he said he exchanged in a swap with a Chinese collector in 2015.

    He also furiously refuted Holthuis' claims that he was in fact a dealer in Chinese art, and bought the statue in Hong Kong in 1996 - a known destination for stolen artefacts.

    'I'm an architect and a passionate collector. But I'm not a dealer,' an angry Van Overeem said. He said he did not know where the statue was.

    But Holthuis disagreed.

    He accused Van Overeem and the statue's new owner of 'conspiring to make the Buddha mummy disappear to make sure that the claimants cannot take action.'

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     Dutch court throws out case of disputed Buddha statue
    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-6487687/Dutch-court-throws-case-disputed-Buddha-statue.html
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