Bangkok, Thailand – Over a number of years within the mid-Sixties, the crumbling ruins of an historical temple in northeast Thailand had been picked clear by native looters.
Probably a whole lot of centuries-old statues that had been lengthy buried beneath the gentle, verdant grounds across the temple had been stolen.
To this present day, all of the recognized artefacts from the pillaging spree, collectively often called the Prakhon Chai hoard, sit scattered hundreds of miles away in museums and collections throughout america, Europe and Australia.
In a matter of weeks, although, the primary of these statues will start their journey dwelling to Thailand.
The acquisitions committee of San Francisco’s Asian Artwork Museum beneficial the discharge final 12 months of 4 bronze statues from the hoard, which had been held in its assortment because the late Sixties.
San Francisco metropolis’s Asian Artwork Fee, which manages the museum, then authorized the proposal on April 22, formally setting the items free.
Some six a long time after the late British antiquities dealer Douglas Latchford is suspected of spiriting the statues in another country, they’re anticipated to reach again in Thailand inside a month or two.
“We’re the righteous homeowners,” Disapong Netlomwong, senior curator for the Workplace of Nationwide Museums at Thailand’s Fantastic Arts Division, instructed Al Jazeera.
“It’s one thing that our ancestors … have made, and it must be exhibited right here to point out the civilisation and the idea of the individuals,” mentioned Disapong, who additionally serves on Thailand’s Committee for the Repatriation of Stolen Artefacts.
The upcoming return of the statues is the most recent victory in Thailand’s quest to reclaim its pilfered heritage.
Their homecoming additionally exemplifies the efforts of nations internationally to retrieve pieces of their own stolen history that also sit in show instances and within the vaults of among the West’s prime museums.
![The Golden Boy statue on display at the National Museum Bangkok, Thailand, following its return last year from New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art [Zsombor Peter/Al Jazeera]](https://www.aljazeera.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/Gold-Boy-2-1747982889.jpg?w=770&resize=770%2C577&quality=80)
From Thai temples to the Acropolis in Athens
Latchford, a high-profile Asian artwork supplier who got here to settle in Bangkok and lived there till his demise in 2020 at 88 years of age, is believed to have earned a fortune from public sale homes, non-public collectors and museums world wide who acquired his smuggled historical artefacts from Thailand and neighbouring Cambodia.
In 2021, Latchford’s daughter, Nawapan Kriangsak, agreed to return her late father’s non-public assortment of greater than 100 artefacts, valued at greater than $50m, to Cambodia.
Although by no means convicted throughout his lifetime, Latchford was charged with falsifying delivery information, wire fraud and a bunch of different crimes associated to antiquities smuggling by a US federal grand jury in 2019.
He died the next 12 months, earlier than the case towards him may go to trial.
In 2023 the Metropolitan Museum of Artwork in New York agreed to return 16 items tied to Latchford’s smuggling community to Cambodia and Thailand.

San Francisco’s Asian Artwork Museum has additionally beforehand returned items to Thailand – two intricately carved stone lintels taken from a pair of temples courting again to the tenth and eleventh centuries, in 2021.
Whereas Thailand and Cambodia have not too long ago fared comparatively properly in efforts to reclaim their looted heritage from US museum collections, Greece has not had such luck with the British Museum in London.
Maybe no case of looted antiquities has grabbed extra information headlines than that of the so-called “Elgin Marbles”.
The two,500-year-old friezes, recognized additionally because the Parthenon Marbles, had been hacked off the long-lasting Acropolis in Athens within the early 1800s by brokers of Lord Elgin, Britain’s ambassador to the Ottoman Empire, which managed Greece at the moment.
Elgin claimed he took the marbles with the permission of the Ottomans after which offered them in 1816 to the British Museum in London, the place they continue to be.
Greece has been demanding the return of the artefacts because the nation’s declaration of independence in 1832 and despatched an official request to the museum in 1983, in accordance with the nongovernmental Hellenic Institute of Cultural Diplomacy.
“Regardless of all these efforts, the British authorities has not deviated from its positions through the years, legally contemplating the Parthenon marbles to belong to Britain. They’ve even handed legal guidelines to forestall the return of cultural artefacts,” the institute mentioned.

‘Colonialism continues to be alive and properly’
Tess Davis, government director of the Antiquities Coalition, a Washington-based nonprofit campaigning towards the illicit commerce of historical artwork and artefacts, mentioned that “colonialism continues to be alive and properly in components of the artwork world”.
“There’s a mistaken assumption by some establishments that they’re higher carers, homeowners, custodians of those cultural objects,” Davis instructed Al Jazeera.
However Davis, who has labored on Cambodia’s repatriation claims with US museums, says the “custodians” defence has lengthy been debunked.
“These antiquities had been cared for by [their] communities for hundreds of years, in some instances for millennia, earlier than there was … a market demand for them, resulting in their looting and trafficking, however we nonetheless do see resistance,” she mentioned.
Brad Gordon, a lawyer representing the Cambodian authorities in its ongoing repatriation of stolen artefacts, has heard museums make all types of claims to defend retaining items that must be returned to their rightful homelands.
Excuses from museums embody claiming that they aren’t positive the place items originated from; that contested objects had been acquired earlier than legal guidelines banned their smuggling; that home legal guidelines block their repatriation, or that the traditional items deserve a extra world viewers than they might obtain of their dwelling nation.
Nonetheless, none of these arguments ought to hold a stolen piece from coming dwelling, Gordon mentioned.
“If we imagine the thing is stolen and the nation of origin needs for it to return dwelling, then the artefact must be returned,” he mentioned.
Outdated attitudes have began breaking down although, and extra looted artefacts are beginning to discover their approach again to their origins.
“There’s undoubtedly a rising development towards doing the appropriate factor on this space, and … I hope that extra museums observe the Asian Artwork Museum’s instance. We’ve come a great distance, however there’s nonetheless a protracted technique to go,” Davis mentioned.
![The Kneeling Lady on display at the National Museum Bangkok, Thailand, following its return last year from New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art [Zsombor Peter/Al Jazeera]](https://www.aljazeera.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/Knee-Lady-1747982733.jpg?w=770&resize=770%2C512&quality=80)
A lot of the progress, Davis believes, is right down to rising media protection of stolen antiquities and public consciousness of the issue within the West, which has positioned mounting stress on museums to do the appropriate factor.
In 2022, the favored US comedy present Final Week Tonight with John Oliver devoted an entire episode to the subject. As Oliver mentioned, for those who go to Greece and go to the Acropolis you may discover “some odd particulars”, comparable to sections lacking from sculptures – which are actually in Britain.
“Truthfully, in case you are ever in search of a lacking artefact, 9 instances out of 10 it’s within the British Museum,” Oliver quips.
Gordon additionally believes a generational shift in considering is at play amongst those that as soon as trafficked within the cultural heritage of different international locations.
“For instance, the kids of many collectors, as soon as they’re conscious of the details of how the artefacts had been faraway from the nation of origin, need their dad and mom to return them,” he mentioned.
Proof of the previous
The 4 bronze statues the San Francisco museum will quickly be returning to Thailand date again to the seventh and ninth centuries.
Thai archaeologist Tanongsak Hanwong mentioned that interval locations them squarely within the Dvaravati civilisation, which dominated northeast Thailand, earlier than the peak of the Khmer empire that may construct the towering spires of Angkor Wat in present-day Cambodia and are available to beat a lot of the encompassing area centuries later.
Three of the slender, mottled figures, one practically a metre tall (3.2 toes), depict Bodhisattva – Buddhist adherents on the trail to nirvana – and the opposite the Buddha himself in a large, flowing gown.
Tanongsak, who introduced the 4 items within the San Francisco assortment to the eye of Thailand’s stolen artefacts repatriation committee in 2017, mentioned they and the remainder of the Prakhon Chai hoard are priceless proof of Thailand’s Buddhist roots at a time when a lot of the area was nonetheless Hindu.
“The truth that we would not have any Prakhon Chai bronzes on show wherever [in Thailand], within the nationwide museum or native museums in anyway, it means we would not have any proof of the Buddhist historical past of that interval in any respect, and that’s unusual,” he mentioned.
![Plai Bat 2 temple in Buriram province, Thailand, from where the Prakhon Chai hoard was looted in the 1960s, as seen in 2016 [Courtesy of Tanongsak Hanwong]](https://www.aljazeera.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/Temple-2-1747983054.jpg?w=770&resize=770%2C446&quality=80)
The Fantastic Arts Division first wrote to San Francisco’s Asian Artwork Museum in regards to the statues’ illicit provenance in 2019, however began to make progress on having them returned solely when the US Division of Homeland Safety received concerned on Thailand’s behalf.
Robert Mintz, the museum’s chief curator, mentioned workers may discover no proof that the statues had been trafficked in their very own information.
However they had been satisfied that they had been looted and smuggled out of Thailand – and of Latchford’s involvement – as soon as Homeland Safety supplied proof, with the assistance of Thai researchers.
“As soon as that proof was offered they usually heard it, their feeling was the suitable place for these could be again in Thailand,” Mintz mentioned of the museum’s workers and acquisition committee.
‘Pull again the curtain’
The San Francisco Asian Artwork Museum went a step additional when it lastly resolved to return the 4 statues to Thailand.
It additionally staged a particular exhibit across the items to focus on the very questions the expertise had raised relating to the theft of antiquities.
The exhibition – Transferring Objects: Studying from Native and International Communities – ran in San Francisco from November to March.
“Certainly one of our objectives was to attempt to point out to the visiting public to the museum how necessary it’s to look traditionally at the place artworks have come from,” Mintz mentioned.
“To drag again the curtain a bit, to say, these items do exist inside American collections and now could be the time to handle challenges that emerge from previous amassing follow,” he mentioned.
Mintz says Homeland Safety has requested the Asian Artwork Museum to look into the provenance of at the very least one other 10 items in its assortment that probably got here from Thailand.

Tess Davis, of the Antiquities Coalition marketing campaign group, mentioned the exhibition was a really uncommon, and welcome, transfer for a museum within the strategy of giving up looted artefacts.
In Thailand, Disapong and Tanongsak say the Asian Artwork Museum’s resolution to recognise Thailand’s rightful declare to the statues may additionally assist them begin bringing the remainder of the Prakhon Chai hoard dwelling, together with 14 extra recognized items in different museums across the US, and at the very least a half-dozen scattered throughout Europe and Australia.
“It’s certainly a superb instance, as a result of as soon as we are able to present the world that the Prakhon Chai bronzes had been all exported from Thailand illegally, then most likely, hopefully another museums will see that each one the Prakhon Chai bronzes they’ve should be returned to Thailand as properly,” Tanongsak mentioned.
There are a number of different artefacts in addition to the Prakhon Chai hoard that Thailand can be trying to repatriate from collections world wide, he mentioned.
Davis mentioned the repatriation of stolen antiquities continues to be being handled by too many with collections as an impediment when it must be seen, because the Asian Artwork Museum has, as a possibility.
“It’s a possibility to teach the general public,” Davis mentioned.
“It’s a possibility to construct bridges with Southeast Asia,” she added, “and I hope different establishments observe swimsuit.”
















































