Final obelisk section in Ethiopia ( April 24 ,2005)
The third and final part of an ancient obelisk looted by Italy
nearly 70 years ago returned to Ethiopia.
The Axum obelisk is regarded as a national treasure by
Ethiopians and there were huge celebrations when the first two
pieces arrived last week.
Prime Minister Meles Zenawi said the monument, due to re-erected
in September, was a "symbol of identity".
Italian troops took it to Rome in 1937, where it stayed despite
a 1947 UN agreement for its return. The final, bottom section of
the 1,700 year-old monument arrived in Axum early on Monday.
The middle piece had been sent last Tuesday and the top on
Friday. "It is not merely a piece of stone, this is a symbol of
identity," Mr Meles said, as he boarded the plane to inspect the
cargo. "It is the end of a very bad chapter," he added.
The ornate 24-metre (78ft) obelisk is regarded as an outstanding
example of architecture from the ancient city of Axum, itself
seen as one of the four great kingdoms of the ancient world.
It stood for years outside the United Nations Food and
Agriculture Organization in Rome, despite an Italian commitment
to send it back to Ethiopia. It was eventually dismantled by
Italian experts in 2004 in readiness for its journey home.
The operation is costing Italy an estimated 6m euros ($7.7m).
But the obelisk's return had been beset by "technical
difficulties" and repeatedly postponed. The 160-ton monument had
to be broken into three pieces.
AXUM OBELISK 1,700 years old weighs 160 tons24m tall Looted in
1937Return costing $7.7mDue to be re-erected in September
Many Ethiopians see the obelisk as a vital national symbol, and
the prospect of its return stirs strong emotions.
Lattanzi, the Italian company responsible for transporting the
obelisk to Axum, has described the obelisk as the largest,
heaviest object ever transported by air. The airstrip at Axum
had to be upgraded to handle the vast Antonov-124 aircraft