3.
What will be the best title of this passage?(词数不超过8个)
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Some 156 Chinese cultural relics smuggled to Denmark
two years ago are expected to return to Beijing
tomorrow following a local court ruling in February to that effect.
The relics include pottery figurines of the Tang Dynasty (AD 618-907) as
well as some rare items dating back to the Xia (2100-1600 BC), Shang (1600-1100
BC), Yuan (1271-1368) and Ming (1368-1644) dynasties, said Song Xinchao, director of the museum department of the State
Administration of Cultural Heritage (SACH) at a reception Tueday
hosted by the Chinese embassy to Denmark.
"The recovery of these items demonstrates the Chinese government's
resolve to seek the return of relics illegally taken overseas," he
said.
Song led a group of SACH experts to help pack the relics and bring them
back home. The relics will be on display after their return.
Danish police seized a batch of smuggled Chinese cultural relics along
with items from other countries in Copenhagen
in February 2006, and immediately notified the Chinese embassy. From the
pictures provided by Danish police, Chinese experts recognized them as cultural
relics.
In accordance with a United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization (UNESCO) convention in 1970 that bans illegal trade in cultural
relics, the Chinese government, through its legal representatives, filed an
appeal in a local court in Denmark last August asking the local police to hand
over the relics to the Chinese government.
An expert group from SACH was also dispatched to Denmark to help
in the proceedings.
Back in China,
the Ministry of Public Security and cultural relics protection departments
located the sites of the stolen relics, providing the necessary legal evidence
to the Danish court.
The court ruled in late February that the relics should be returned to China. The two
countries completed the formalities for the handover earlier this month.
China has intensified efforts to
recover its lost relics in recent years. One case involving Sino-US cooperation
in the field began in March 2000, when a statue looted from a Chinese tomb in
the Five Dynasties period (AD907-960) appeared in an advertisement for an
auction in the US.
The statue was seized by US Customs officials prior to the auction and after
year-long legal and diplomatic talks, it finally returned home.
Shan Jixiang, director of the SACH, told China Daily in
February that he would like to invite directors of major museums to the sites
from which cultural artifacts have been looted.
"They should come and see how invaluable murals were cut into pieces
and taken away and how ancient tombs were raided," he said, adding that
China wants to sign with the US an MOU on cooperation in preventing theft of
relics, illegal excavation and illicit trade of cultural property.