Crimea Trekking Tours
Battle to save Crimea's treasures |
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The security services in the Crimea are clamping down on an ancient trade - large-scale theft from the region's unique archaeological sites. It is estimated that at least $2m worth of antiquities are smuggled out of the Crimea every year for buyers in the West.Some pieces from Greek and Roman graves are even stolen to order for private collectors, while others end up in museums and auction houses.
They have been tipped off that this ancient burial site has once again been targeted by thieves, working under cover of darkness. For the man leading the operation, who does not want to be named, it is an intensely frustrating experience. The robbers can afford fast cars for their getaway, while his men struggle to raise the cash for the petrol to give chase. Buried gold The lush green land by the Black Sea is quite literally a treasure trove. Both the Greeks and Romans settled here, and for those who know where to look, their traces are everywhere - from the remains of ancient temples, to the graves with their valuable ornaments.
Just outside Sevastopol, I meet Nikolai. In his mid-thirties, he is a historian by training, but a grave-robber by choice. For him, it is mixing business with pleasure. "It's like a virus - it's so exciting when you dig. The land is packed with the stuff, so my hobby has become my business. It makes no sense for me to work as a history teacher when I can make 10 times more by digging," he says. The rewards of theft can be huge. Frustrated archaeologists The cramped offices of the Crimea's Eastern Institute are crammed with the archaeologists' legal finds - each item painstakingly cleaned and catalogued.
There is no money here for anything else, even though the antiquities themselves are worth tens of thousands of dollars. For archaeologists like Elzara Hayretdinova, the real frustration is that in the time it takes her to find and catalogue, the grave-robbers can pillage an entire site - making it useless for further study. "Give me a pistol and I'd kill them. When we arrive after they've been - it's devastating.
The pillaging is not limited to ancient graves. Those of British soldiers who died in the Crimean War are also considered fair game by the robbers, as are German burial sites from World War II. With such big money at stake and buyers in the West still eager for Crimean treasure, the battle against this ancient trade will be a tough one to win.
By Caroline Wyatt in Crimea for BBC News |
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Battle to save Crimea's treasures phone: +380973278698 Kirill Yasko
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