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    Museum robbed at Greece's Ancient Olympia

    ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Two masked gunmen stormed into a small museum at the birthplace of the ancient Olympics in southern Greece on Friday, smashing display cases with hammers and making off with dozens of antiquities up to 3,200 years old, authorities said.

    It was the second major museum theft in as many months in debt-crippled Greece, and a culture ministry unionist said spending cuts have compromised security at hundreds of museums and ancient sites across the country. With unemployment at 21 percent and Greece's economy in its fifth year of recession, crime, poverty and homeless rates also have been increasing.

    Friday's robbers targeted the museum of the ancient Games at Olympia, a few hundred yards (meters) away from the world heritage site's main museum that contains priceless statues and bronze artifacts excavated at the holiest sanctuary of ancient Greece.

    Officials said 65 artifacts were stolen by the robbers, who tied up the only site guard, a 48-year-old woman.

    Culture Minister Pavlos Geroulanos submitted his resignation after the morning robbery, but it was unclear whether it had been accepted by Prime Minister Lucas Papademos. Geroulanos traveled on Friday to ancient Olympia, some 210 miles (340 kilometers) southwest of Athens.

    "This is a very sad day ... a tragedy," ministry Secretary-General Lina Mendoni said.

    Police in Olympia and neighboring regions set up roadblocks for the thieves, who are believed to have escaped in a car driven by an accomplice, while a police helicopter combed the area and special investigators were rushed in from Athens.

    "According to the results of the investigation so far, unknown persons, this morning, at about 07:34 a.m., immobilized the guard of the museum and removed bronze and clay objects from the displays, as well as a gold ring," a police statement said.

    Police have provided a hotline for the public to provide information that could lead to the thieves' capture.

    A culture ministry official said the stolen antiquities dated from the 9th to the 4th centuries B.C., apart from the seal-ring which dates to Late Bronze Age Mycenaean times and was found in another part of southern Greece.

    "They took small objects made of bronze and pottery — figurines, vases and lamps — and the ring," the official said. "The artifacts were behind reinforced glass panels which fracture like a car windscreen, and the thieves grabbed whatever small objects they could reach through the holes they opened."

    Because the stolen artifacts have been displayed and catalogued, it is impossible for them to be sold in the open market.

    A spokesman for museum guards urged emergency government action to protect historic sites and museums, warning that spending cuts taken to save the country from bankruptcy have eroded security.

    "The cutbacks imposed by the European Union and the International Monetary Fund have hurt our cultural heritage, which is also the world's heritage" said Yiannis Mavrikopoulos, head of the culture ministry museum and site guards' union.

    "There are no funds for new guard hirings," he said. "There are 2,000 of us, and there should be 4,000, while many have been forced to take early retirement ahead of the new program of layoffs. We face terrible staff shortages. As a result, our monuments and sites don't have optimum protection — even though guards are doing their very best to protect our heritage.

    Officials said the robbers seemed to have poor information on the museum, asking the guard where they could get golden wreaths and a valuable stamp collection — which are not part of the display.

    "They seem to have operated more as if they were carrying out a holdup" rather than a professional museum heist, the ministry official told the AP on condition of anonymity because of the ongoing investigation.

    The ancient Olympics were the most important sporting festival in ancient Greece, held every four years and lasting up to five days. They started in 776 B.C. and lasted until A.D. 394 when Roman emperor Theodosius abolished the festival, deeming it pagan. The site hosted an Olympic event during the Athens 2004 Games, when the shot-put was held in the ancient stadium.

    The flame for each modern Olympics is lit in a special ceremony at ancient Olympia — and the ceremony for the London Games will be held there on May 10.

    Olympia Mayor Efthimios Kotzias urged authorities to improve security.

    "The level of security is indeed lacking," Kotzias told state-run NET television. "These are treasures. A piece of world heritage has been lost, thanks to these thieves. ... I think (authorities) should have been more mindful and the security should have been more serious."

    Friday's robbery is the second major museum theft in the past two months in Greece. In January, thieves made off with art works by 20th-century masters Pablo Picasso and Piet Mondrian from the National Gallery in one of the best-guarded areas of central Athens.

    In that pre-dawn heist, the burglars also took a pen and ink drawing of a religious scene by Italian 16th-century painter Guglielmo Caccia. As they fled, thieves abandoned a fourth work by Mondrian. No arrests have been made.

    ___

    Demetris Nellas contributed to this report.

    (This version corrects Olympia mayor's name.)

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    24 comments

    • joseph  •  Chicago, United States  •  3 months ago
      Did you ever wonder? Treasures from every country are routinely stolen from Museums and depositories. These are extremely expensive items and you know they will eventually wind up in the collections of the elite. These items are never returned to their rightful owners. What does it say for the morality of the elite of the world?
      • Her Jam 3 months ago
        What does it say about the morality of any of the world?
    • Jamie  •  Wakefield, Canada  •  3 months ago
      can you say hired by someone else? These guys are working for a rich collector who needs pieces for his collection
    • B  •  3 months ago
      When I hear of robberies like this, I always wonder what the thieves plan on doing with the items they stole. It's not like they can take the stuff to an antiques dealer and get top dollar for it, or take it to a pawn shop and hawk it for cash. Everyone knows that the stuff was stolen.
      • De 3 months ago
        so i guess you never heard of the black market? you think they walk into a known place to sell these? most of Greece's ancient artifacts have been stolen from many countries. how come Italy, Spain, Germany and others have Greek museums with Greek artifacts?? how come we cant get those back? clearly they belong to Greece right?
      • Dfghytv 3 months ago
        It would be somewhat hard, but alot of that stuff is solid gold, just the gold is worth ALOT,
    • Lisa E  •  Manhattan, United States  •  3 months ago
      This breaks my heart! As someone who loves archeology, history and museums and planning to go to Greece this summer I find this so troubling, not for my own sake but for the sake of antiquity and for the health of tourism (one of the biggest, if not the biggesst economic drive of Greece). This is like shooting yourself in the foot. You don't do unemployment much good when there is no reason to go to Greece. I felt the same sick feeling watching people throw fire cocktails in the square in Cairo last year. One of the buildings on the square is the Cairo museum and I felt literally sick knowing that some of the world's most fascinating history was at risk. I had gone to Egypt in 2009 and I loved the history and the people. I had hoped to be able to return soon but the area is far too unsettled for me to feel at ease. Jo-el makes a good point as well, not so much about the theives because I can't say it isn't just hunger driving them, but the buyers... These pieces will end up in a "private collection" somewhere never to see the light of day just so some jerk can have bragging rights of depriving the rest of the world. Black markets for antiquities has always been a problem and would be faster fixed if buyers faced penalties they couldn't buy their way out of.
    • JO-EL  •  3 months ago
      Find them, prosocute them, shoot them! Not the theives, the Collecters! The theives are just trying to make a buck, the collectors are stealing our world heritage!
    • JO-EL  •  3 months ago
      Only the wealthy steal from the world, with no respect for anyone but themselves! These are the same people who are controling our Corporations and our legislators and living high on the graces of the working and the poor of the world! Corruption spares no one!
    • Moth-ball  •  3 months ago
      Okay, some damage done. My advice to improve security is:

      Bring in guard dogs to help patrol the sites, take some the vast amount of equipment that was for 2004 Olympics (included wireless surveillance packages), bring in civil defense (national guards) and make sure all security employees carry adequate firearms.

      No of this adds extra cost to the budget. Every province and prefecture should have some form of direct communication with these 'national' or federal employees as well.

      It is a disgrace to allow foreigners to enter Greece and abscond with the little that left of these treasures. If these stolen artifacts go to north through Albania and the Former Yugoslavia or out through ports to Turkey, then they will never be seen in the original context again.

      Wake up...and also detain and kick out the foreign anarchists in Athens.

      Get TOUGH and BE TOUGH!
    • Dean  •  Jersey City, United States  •  3 months ago
      anyway you look at this, it is just sad...
    • Vasia  •  Athens, Greece  •  3 months ago
      I am really #$%$ off with what happened this morning at Ancient Olympia. History repeats itself for the third time. Germany breaking up Europe and then pillaging and looting whatever artifacts takes their fancy or exploiting countries they feel is their holidy playgrounds? Look at their museums and tell me how many of their artifacts are german in comparison to European artifacts? Look at which countries they vacation at and think about it.
      • Jun 3 months ago
        Before you start on a rampage about Germany better take a walk through some US and British, French and Italian museums as well. Greece has been looted for 150 years, but until today you just ignored that little fact.
      • Vasia 3 months ago
        Ignored that little fact? The new Acropolis museum was built as one of the conditions for the Parthenon statues to be returned to Greece. We built the museum but where are the artifacts? Still in London, France and other countries have signed agreements to slowly return artifacts to their countries of origins but nothing has happened yet. No, as an archeologist and art historian I am fully aware of where every major piece of art is scattered throughtout the world (US as well). I am grateful to the coutries for preserving and honouring them but I think it's time for them to come home. As for the term looting may I remind you what happened in Iraq and Egypt very recently. I believe In Iraq US troops thought the museums were free souvenir shops.
    • Artdacious  •  Los Angeles, United States  •  3 months ago
      Wail of despair... it's not just the Greece loosing it's heritage, it's all of Western Civilization.
      • Hunter 3 months ago
        Nope...someone is keeping it for us, and it's probably a lot better protected now.
    • Royal Ron  •  Pleasanton, United States  •  3 months ago
      Most likely the corrupt Greek political thieves or as known in the U,S, politicians!
    • Jigs Ranada Adefuin  •  Manila, Philippines  •  3 months ago
      Sad... :(
    • The Parents  •  Los Angeles, United States  •  3 months ago
      Just goes to show how dumb most thieves really are.
    • Sam  •  3 months ago
      Greece must protect its heritage. Volunteers should staff the security force to protect their treasures. It's bad enough that rioters in Athens and other areas of Greece are looting and setting fire to buildings. Come to your senses, Hellas!
    • PETER  •  3 months ago
      I'm sure that 48 year old woman security guard really had the masked gunmen worried..
    • YD  •  3 months ago
      The robbers were Germans. Merkel sent them out there to secure bailout funds.
    • expletive_xom  •  3 months ago
      austerity cuts on the security budget?
    • Brian  •  Texarkana, United States  •  3 months ago
      Latest rumor: items were not stolen for sale. Rather they were taken by radical Islamists wanting to destroy ANYTHING that does not bear the word MOHAMMAD somewhere on it.
    • Hunter  •  3 months ago
      I find it funny that all of you want to blame foreigners for your problems, while your fellow Greeks are rioting and burning your country.
      Could it possibly be that your own people stole the stuff because they're afraid your government isn't going to support your lives of indolence anymore?
    • John  •  3 months ago
      cradle of civilization=abyss of collective

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