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Cyprus MOU renewal under consideration
Comment from collectors and dealers is needed once again
By
Peter K. Tompa |
December 15, 2011
Fresh on the heels
of its deliberation over import restrictions on coins from Bulgaria,
the US State Department has now announced a hearing on extension of the
MOU with Cyprus that is now up for its 5-year renewal. The Cultural
Property Advisory Committee is seeking public comment on the renewal
request To submit comments electronically to the State Department's
Cultural Property Advisory Committee (CPAC), see below:
Those present restrictions bar entry into the United States of the
following coin types unless they are accompanied with documentation
establishing that they were out of Cyprus as of the date of the
restrictions, July 16, 2007:
1. Issues of the ancient kingdoms of Amathus, Kition, Kourion,
Idalion, Lapethos, Marion, Paphos, Soli, and Salamis dating from the end
of the 6th century B.C. to 332 B.C.
2. Issues of the
Hellenistic period, such as those of Paphos, Salamis, and Kition from
332 B.C. to c. 30 B.C. (including coins of Alexander the Great, Ptolemy,
and his Dynasty)
3. Provincial and local issues of the Roman period from c. 30 B.C. to 235 A.D.
Why
bother to comment when the State Department rejected CPAC's
recommendations against import restrictions on Cypriot coins back in
2007 and then misled both Congress and the public about its actions?
And isn't it also true that although the vast majority of public
comments recorded have been squarely against import restrictions, the
State Department and U.S. Customs have imposed import restrictions on
coins anyway, most recently on ancient coins from Greece?
Simply,
silence just allows the State Department bureaucrats and their allies
in the archaeological establishment to claim that collectors have
acquiesced to broad restrictions on their ability to import common
ancient coins that are widely available worldwide. And, of course,
acquiescence is all that may be needed to justify going back and
imposing import restrictions on the Roman Imperial coins that are still
exempt from these regulations.
Under the circumstances, please
take 5 minutes and tell CPAC, the State Department bureaucrats and the
archaeologists what you think.
How do I comment? To submit comments three pages in length or less electronically, go here:
http://www.regulations.gov/#!submitComment;D=DOS-2011-0135-0002
If
you are having trouble, go to the Federal eRulemaking Portal
(http://www.regulations.gov), enter the Docket No. DOS-2011-0135 for
Cyprus, and follow the prompts to submit a comment. To send comments via
US Mail or FEDEX see the directions contained in the Federal Register
Notice above. For further information, also see
http://exchanges.state.gov/heritage/whatsnew.html.
What should I
say? The State Department bureaucracy has dictated that any public
comments should relate solely to the following statutory criteria:
1. Whether the cultural patrimony of Cyprus is in jeopardy from looting of its archaeological materials;
2. Whether Cyprus has taken measures consistent with the 1970 UNESCO Convention to protect its cultural patrimony;
3.
Whether application of U.S. import restrictions, if applied in concert
with similar restrictions by other art importing countries, would be of
substantial benefit in deterring a serious situation of pillage and that
less drastic remedies are not available; and,
4. Whether
the application of import restrictions is consistent with the general
interest of the international community in the interchange of cultural
property among nations for scientific, cultural, and educational
purposes.
(See 19 U.S.C. § 2602 (a).) Yet, collectors can
really only speak to what they know. So, tell them what you think
within this broad framework. For instance, over time, import
restrictions will certainly impact the American public's ability to
study and preserve historical coins and maintain people to people
contacts with collectors abroad. Yet, foreign collectors-including
collectors in Cyprus-will be able to import coins as before. And, one
can also remind CPAC that less drastic remedies, like regulating metal
detectors or instituting reporting programs akin to the Treasure Act and
Portable Antiquities Scheme, must be tried first.
Be forceful,
but polite. We can and should disagree with what the State Department
bureaucrats and their allies in the archaeological establishment are
doing to our hobby, but we should endeavor to do so in an upstanding
manner.
For more information about these issues, see:
http://culturalpropertyobserver.blogspot.com/ Please submit comments just once, before the deadline on Jan. 3, 2012.