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A Cambodian court was continuing to question an Australian man today after
police allegedly discovered three Angkor-era statues in his hotel room which
they accuse him of planning to remove from the country. Chief prosecutor of Siem Reap provincial court, So Vat, said court authorities
were trying to ascertain the strength of charges that may be laid against Steven
Doyle, 36, after he was arrested on Friday when a cleaner allegedly discovered
three statues weighing around 30 kilograms in total in his hotel room and tipped
off police.
"What charges depends on his intent. The court continues to question him
now about where the stones came from and what he was going to do with them,"
So Vat said.
Doyle faces between six months and eight years in prison for intent to traffic
the ancient artefacts if convicted, So Vat said.
He said Doyle may also face an additional case from the Ministry of Culture,
which can demand compensation equal to the value of the artefacts or jail in
lieu of payment. The value and exact age of the artefacts was not immediately
clear.
The northern city of Siem Reap is the gateway to the Angkor Wat temple complex.
Combating looting from the temples, most of which date back to around the 12th
and 13th centuries, to feed an international artefact trade in ancient Khmer
art has proved a major challenge for the Cambodian government.
Police said Doyle had initially said he bought the carvings from a Cambodian
dealer, but later changed his story and admitted he had collected them from
Angkor himself.
Groups trying to protect Cambodian culture from looters have long called on
the government to show it can get tough on smugglers and enforce the laws to
their fullest extent.
Under Cambodian law Doyle can be held for up to six months in pre-trial detention
while the prosecution builds a case.
DPA |