Germany to Return Portuguese Stone Cross to Namibia
The German
Historical Museum has announced it will return a 15th century monument to
Namibia after it was taken during the colonial era.
The Stone
Cross is a Portuguese navigation landmark placed on the southwest African
coastline in 1486.
But when the
area was under German colonial control in the 1890s, the cross was taken and
moved to Europe.
Namibia
asked for its return in 2017 and on Friday, the Berlin museum formally agreed
to the request.
Germany has
pledged to return artefacts and human remains to its former colonies.
At a
ceremony, German Culture Minister Monika Grütters said it was a "clear
signal that we are committed to coming to terms with our colonial past".
Namibia's
ambassador to Germany, Andreas Guibeb, called it "important as a step for
us to reconcile with our colonial past and the trail of humiliation and
systematic injustice that it left behind".
A museum
press release said the cross would be returned in August.
Portuguese
explorer Diogo Cão first placed the 3.5m (11ft) stone cross - featuring the
country's coat of arms - on Africa's southwest coast during one of his expeditions.
It became so
well known it featured on old maps of the area.
But a German
naval commander took the cross in 1893, during the country's control of what
became Namibia between 1884 and 1915.
The German
Historical Museum foundation's president, Raphael Gross, wrote in the
Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung that the cross represented "the slow
beginning of colonial rule in present-day Namibia".
A number of
African nations have in recent years called on European museums to return
artefacts taken away during the period of colonial control.
Experts
recommended that French museums return African treasures to their countries of
origin last year. President Emmanuel Macron announced 26 thrones and
statues taken from Benin would go home shortly afterwards.
UK museums
have also decided to repatriate artefacts to African countries.
The National
Army Museum announced it would return a lock of Ethiopian Emperor Tewodros II's
hair in March, while the Victoria and Albert Museum offered to return
Ethiopian treasures in November - albeit on loan.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-europe
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