缅北禁地

CTED to hold a virtual roundtable on “Threat and Trends: The Illicit Traffic of Cultural Property for Terrorist Purposes”

Looters aided by stone-cutters stole parts of a frieze from the site of the ancient city of Hatra, Iraq in 2010. UNESCO

On Wednesday, 7 September 2022, CTED will hold a roundtable discussion on the traffic and illicit trade of cultural property for terrorist purposes, organized with UNESCO and the Permanent Mission of Italy to the UN.

While condemning the destruction of cultural heritage in contexts of armed conflicts, including and notably by terrorist groups, the United Nations Security Council has highlighted on different occasions the role that the illicit trade and trafficking in cultural property can have in generating revenue to support recruitment efforts and strengthen the operational capacity of terrorist groups to organize and carry out attacks.

Most recently, in resolution 2617 (2021), the Security Council encouraged CTED “to raise awareness of the importance of Member State cooperation with investigations, prosecutions, seizure and confiscation as well as the return, restitution and repatriation of trafficked, illicitly exported or imported, stolen, looted, illicitly excavated or illicitly traded cultural property, through appropriate channels and in accordance with relevant legal frameworks as well as with the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized Crime and the Protocols thereto and relevant regional, subregional, and bilateral agreements”.

Pursuant to its mandate resolution, CTED will convene experts from academia and civil society for an inaugural roundtable discussion on the terrorist dimension of the traffic and illicit trade of cultural property. The discussion will shed light on the nature, scope and discernable trends currently defining the phenomenon, and identify any existing research, legal and policy gaps and opportunities to be built upon to comprehensively address the issue at national, regional and international level, including within the framework of UNESCO’s related Conventions.

CTED will be joined by representatives of UNESCO and the Permanent Mission of Italy to the United Nations in delivering opening remarks to the event.

The concept note for the event is available here.
The agenda for the event is available
here.
You can register for the event
.

For questions or additional information, please contact Ms. Cecilia Naddeo, Legal and Criminal Justice Coordinator at CTED, at naddeo@un.org and Ms. Beatrice Tesconi, Associate Legal Officer, at beatrice.tesconi@un.org.