À la Poursuite des Pilleurs de Temples
In 1972, during Cambodia's civil war, a sandstone statue was torn from the age-old Koh Ker temple. Measuring 1.58m high and weighing 110 kilos, it depicts a prince and belongs to a collection that retraces the epic of the Mahabharata. The sculpture was first sold at auction in London in 1975, via a strange British art dealer based in Bangkok, and reappeared in 2011 at Sotheby's in New York with a bid of $2.5 million. A sale that was ultimately prohibited. In the meantime, experts from the École française d'Extrême-Orient, an American lawyer commissioned by Phnom Penh and UNESCO mobilized the Heritage Police across the Atlantic to denounce the theft of a cultural asset. In 2013, the work was returned to Cambodia. A captivating investigation into the international mafia of antiquities trafficking.
You May Also Like

In the Frozen Tomb of Mo…
Der Räuber Heigl

Huaquero

Mysteries of the Terraco…

The Donut King

S21: The Khmer Rouge Kil…

Secrets of Christ's Tomb

Angkor Rediscovered

Redlight

How to Rob a Bank

National Geographic: Pyr…

Egypt's New Tomb Reveale…

Golden Slumbers

Tut: The Boy King

Exile
Who Killed Chea Vichea?

The Missing Picture

John Baumhackl: Chemical…
