IT 风险法人

TipTip Communication
股份有限公司


프로젝트

консультант по посо

페이지 정보

创建日期x :24-10-15 06:48 参考 :3件 评论 :0数

본문

Auction house withdraws shrunken heads and other human remains from sale following outcry
<a href=https://pravo.sberlegal.ru>какие документы нужны в загсе для развода
кто такой истец при расторжении брака
через сколько разводят после подачи заявления в загс
для развода какие документы нужны в загс
подать на развод без мужа
сбер право телефон горячей линии
расторжение брака через загс
что нужно для развода в загс
апелляция от кассации чем отличается
какие надо документы для развода через загс
</a>
An auction house in England has withdrawn human remains, including shrunken heads and ancestral skulls, from sale following an outcry.
 
The Swan auction house in Tetsworth, Oxfordshire withdrew more than two dozen lots from an upcoming auction titled “The Curious Collector Sale,” including an 18th-century Tsantsa shrunken head, which was expected to fetch ?20,000-?25,000 ($26,000-$33,000) and was previously owned by Hugh Hefner, founder of Playboy magazine.
 
Other withdrawn lots include an ancestral skull from the Solomon Islands, another from the Fon tribe in Benin and a double ancestor skull from Congo.
 
The planned sale of another piece, described as a 19th-century horned Naga human skull, drew criticism from Neiphiu Rio, Chief Minister of the Indian state of Nagaland.
Rio wrote to India’s External Affairs Minister, S. Jaishankar, asking him to intervene “to ensure that the auction of the human remains of our people is halted.”
 
In his letter, Rio said he had been informed about the auction by the Forum for Naga Reconciliation (FNR), a grouping of organizations that works to reconcile different Naga political groups, some of which have engaged in armed struggle for independence from India in recent decades.
 
In its letter to Rio, the FNR said it “condemns this inhumane and violent practice where indigenous ancestral human remains continue to be collector’s items.”
 
“Such auctions continue the policy of dehumanization and colonial violence on the Naga people,” it added.
 
Another of those to criticize the planned sale was Laura Van Broekhoven, director of the Pitt Rivers Museum, which is part of the University of Oxford.
 
“Please, immediately pull from tomorrow’s auction the human and ancestral remains of Naga, Shuar, Dayak, Kota, Fon, Vili people and other communities in Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Nigeria, Congo, Ecuador, Nagaland, Benin,” she wrote in a post on X on Tuesday.

我们TiPTiP

的地址


无论首尔还是济州岛只要您需要我们随传随到!
您也可以乘坐KTX或飞机,来我们这里喝下午茶!

用亲切的庆尚道方言,

FAX 02-6008-0171

大邱广域市 南区 大明路 265 双龙大厦3楼