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    12 Kommentare

    1. Prudent_Reindeer9627 on

      TL;DR It was stolen by a museum worker who sold it to a random jeweler for $3,000. Literally less than what it was worth in gold alone. Whole thing was recorded on CCTV, no conspiracy here.

    2. Imsurethatsbullshit on

      I was there in 2012, the metal detectors that scanned your backpacks upon entry didn’t work, they were not even plugged in. But of course somebody would sit there stare at a black screen and nod. Throughout the museum there were cameras that were not plugged in, wooden showcases with scarabs that were not locked and the museum store would sell nearly identical copies as souvenirs, could have just gone back and taken the legit ones and left the souvenirs.. im surprised they have legit stuff left

    3. Godess Ma’at highly displeased with this guy. His heart will weight about a ton comes the weighting and Ammu will devour his soul.

    4. WeAreAllFallible on

      It was stolen from the Cairo museum and the highlighted responses seem to be that they believe they need to stop overseas exhibits and call for return of artifacts overseas?

      I’m all for national control over what they do with their heritage items, but I’m confused by the rationale connecting the action to the response.

    5. This is the kind of behavior western museums point to when indigenous museums ask for their stolen items back.

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