Thieves destroy 5,000-yr-old rock painting in Spain
BY Agencies23 April 2014 5:45 AM IST
Agencies23 April 2014 5:45 AM IST
A 5,000 year-old rock painting in southern Spain has been destroyed by thieves who tried to steal the Unesco World Heritage-listed artwork by chipping it off the cave wall where it was housed.
Residents of the Santa Elena in Spain’s southern Jaén province are reeling after news of the damage.
Local mayor Juan Caminero said the painting was now ‘irreparable’ and condemned the act of vandalism as ‘heartless’, Spanish daily La Vanguardia reported on Monday.
News of the attempted theft first emerged on Saturday after visitors to the Los Escolares Cave noticed the damage to the anthropomorphic painting of a swallow. After noticing what looked like evidence of someone having tried to chip away at the image with a pick, they spotted fine dust and rock fragments on the floor. Police are now investigating the incident.
Jaén province is home to 42 sites with UNESCO-listed rock paintings, many of them freely accessible to the public and without not properly protected, according to the Speleology Federation of Andalusia (Fae).
These paintings are part of a significant group of several hundred sites along Spain’s Mediterranean seaboard, and are the largest group of rock sites in Europe, according to Unesco.
‘A lot of these places are abandoned and need greater supervision,’ Fae president José Antonio Berrocal told The Local.
‘Although there is legislation protecting these sites in theory, there is a lack of political will,’ he added.
‘Obviously you can’t have policemen stationed in every cave, but we need a system of continuous monitoring with officers coming around periodically to monitor the situation,’ the cave expert explained. Agencies
Residents of the Santa Elena in Spain’s southern Jaén province are reeling after news of the damage.
Local mayor Juan Caminero said the painting was now ‘irreparable’ and condemned the act of vandalism as ‘heartless’, Spanish daily La Vanguardia reported on Monday.
News of the attempted theft first emerged on Saturday after visitors to the Los Escolares Cave noticed the damage to the anthropomorphic painting of a swallow. After noticing what looked like evidence of someone having tried to chip away at the image with a pick, they spotted fine dust and rock fragments on the floor. Police are now investigating the incident.
Jaén province is home to 42 sites with UNESCO-listed rock paintings, many of them freely accessible to the public and without not properly protected, according to the Speleology Federation of Andalusia (Fae).
These paintings are part of a significant group of several hundred sites along Spain’s Mediterranean seaboard, and are the largest group of rock sites in Europe, according to Unesco.
‘A lot of these places are abandoned and need greater supervision,’ Fae president José Antonio Berrocal told The Local.
‘Although there is legislation protecting these sites in theory, there is a lack of political will,’ he added.
‘Obviously you can’t have policemen stationed in every cave, but we need a system of continuous monitoring with officers coming around periodically to monitor the situation,’ the cave expert explained. Agencies
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