Editor’s Note: This article was originally published by The Art Newspaper, an editorial partner of CNN Style.

CNN  — 

New York and US federal authorities have returned 27 relics to Cambodia valued at $3.8 million that were stolen by antiquities traffickers, among them important Buddhist and Hindu statues, the Manhattan district attorney announced last Thursday.

The probe resulting in the repatriation was led by the district attorney’s office and the US Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) unit. The HSI’s special agent in charge, Peter C. Fitzhugh, described the works as “invaluable to the preservation of Cambodian history.” A repatriation ceremony in New York was attended by Cambodian and Homeland Security officials.

The district attorney’s office said that 24 of the 27 items were seized as a result of an investigation of Subhash Kapoor, an antiquities dealer described in the past by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) as one of the world’s most prolific art smugglers, and the New York antiquities dealer Nancy Wiener.

Kapoor, who is currently in prison in India amid an ongoing trial there, was indicted in New York in 2019 with seven co-defendants on smuggling charges. The district attorney’s office filed paperwork for his extradition to the US last July.

Manhattan's district attorney released an image showing three of the items.

In a press release, the district attorney’s office noted that for many years, its antiquities trafficking unit has been investigating Kapoor and fellow conspirators for the illegal looting, export and sale of ancient art from Sri Lanka, India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Cambodia, Thailand, Nepal, Indonesia, Myanmar and other nations. From 2011 to 2020, it added, its office and HSI recovered more than 2,500 items trafficked by Kapoor and his network valued at more than $143 million.

Weiner, accused of involvement in importing the other three objects, was charged with conspiracy and possession of stolen property in 2016. US investigators allege she used her New York gallery to purchase, smuggle, launder, and sell millions of dollars’ worth of antiquities stolen from Afghanistan, Cambodia, China, India, Pakistan and Thailand.

Among the highlights from last week’s repatriation, cited by the district attorney’s office, are a bronze meditating Buddha on a Naga, a statue of Shiva and a Buddhist sandstone sculpture of Prajnaparamita.

“The repatriation of these 27 stunning relics to the people of Cambodia restores an important link between the nation’s classical Angkor era and its modern customs and beliefs that, for far too long, was disrupted by the greed of stolen antiquities traffickers,” said Cyrus Vance Jr, the Manhattan district attorney, in a press statement.

In an emailed statement, Cambodia’s Minister of Culture and Fine Arts, Phoeurng Sackona, said that the objects “are the souls of generations of Khmer ancestors, and represent Cambodia’s awe-inspiring past, which have departed from their motherland over a number of years during a period of war.

“We are proud to present our joint efforts and cooperation between governments of our two countries to the Cambodian people and the world,” she added, “for the benefit of all humanity, particularly Cambodia’s younger generation, so that they can learn the value of these treasures that are their cultural identity.”

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