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Belgian diplomats accused of damaging ancient fossil | |
2007-08-28 | |
Egyptian authorities have accused Belgian diplomats of damaging a 40 million-year-old whale fossil when they allegedly drove over the ancient remains in a protected desert area, an official said Monday. Belgian officials denied any damage was done. Mohamed Ibrahim, an official in the Ministry of Environment, said the diplomats in four-wheel drive vehicles ran over the fossil's neck in July after ignoring signs warning visitors not to drive in the Wadi el-Hitan, or Valley of the Whales, protected area and UNESCO World Heritage site located about 150 kilometres outside of Cairo. The Belgian Foreign Ministry in Brussels and embassy in Cairo denied that the vehicles caused any damage to the ancient fossils. Foreign Ministry spokesman Marc Michielsen said the two diplomatic plated all-terrain vehicles were in the area but ''did not leave the road.'' ''They were not aware that the area was a protected area,'' Michielsen said. ''It seems the area was not cordoned off, and no notice or guards were present.'' Egyptian and Belgian authorities both said the incident took place in July. It was unclear why Egyptian officials waited until late August to publicly make the allegations. Michielsen said Egyptian authorities sent a letter to Belgian authorities in mid-July, which Belgian authorities answered on 5 August by saying the Belgians did not damage any fossils. ''Since then we have not received any reaction,'' Michielsen said. Ibrahim, who works in the Environmental Ministry's Natural Protected Zones office, said the Egyptian prosecutor's office has estimated the damage at EUR 238,707 and has demanded Belgium pay that amount in compensation. ''The financial value doesn't really matter. What matters is the historical value,'' he said.
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Posted by:lotp |
#4 Speaking of fossils and Helen, here's one she might've been interested in... Fossilised penis sold at auction It was trapped under the Siberian permafrost for more than 12,000 years, and discovered by fossil hunters who at first mistook it as a mammoth tusk. But on Sunday, the four and a half foot long fossilised walrus penis — believed to be the world's largest — was the most discussed item of natural history for sale at I.M. Chait auctions in Beverley Hills. Believe it or not, the buyer was Ripley's, the chain of oddity museums, whose owners bid $8000 ($A9620) over the phone from Orlando, Florida. |
Posted by: tu3031 2007-08-28 15:28 |
#3 40 million-year-old whale fossil Are you sure this isn't about Helen Thomas? |
Posted by: Spot 2007-08-28 10:16 |
#2 Shakedown. |
Posted by: Whiskey Mike 2007-08-28 06:35 |
#1 "Put Senator Byrd down, M. le Ambassador. You know the guide said we musn't touch!" |
Posted by: Seafarious 2007-08-28 00:42 |