Arts Minister Mitch Fifield handed over artefacts -- Seated Buddha, a 900-year-old stone statue of Goddess Pratyangira and a third century rock carving of Worshippers of Buddha -- to Tourism Minister Mahesh Sharma at Canberra-based prestigious National Gallery of Australia (NGA).
Receiving the artefacts, Sharma said that the gesture of returning art pieces has taken the relationship to a new level as the artworks carried an emotional value for India.
"Our sincere thanks to government of Australia and Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull and Minister Fifield and the National Gallery of Australia for the gesture of returning these three antiquities, which will carry a big message of the relations between two countries," Sharma said, adding that the artworks will now be placed in National Museum in India.
"This is the ethical demonstration of NGA...This process in which Indian and Australian governments are working together is a testimony of quality and health of the bilateral relations," Fifield said, adding there were at least seven more objects in questions which the NGA is currently probing.
The ceremony was also attended by Indian High Commissioner Navdeep Suri. The ceremony took place in the gallery which houses almost 5,000 pieces of Asian art.
Last year, the NGA research team examined new photographic evidence from the French Institute of Pondicherry that indicated a sculpture of Goddess Pratyangira which was bought for USD 247,500 was in India in 1974.
The Buddha carving was bought for USD 595,000 and the NGA was provided with and had verified new photographic evidence that indicates the sculpture was in India as late as 1990s.
"This new evidence means the NGA cannot legally or ethically retain these works, and returning them to India is unquestionably the right thing to do," NGA Director Gerard Vaughan said.
In June this year, the US had returned over 200 cultural artefacts estimated at USD 100 million to India.
Meanwhile, Sharma also met Assistant Minister for Trade, Tourism and Investment Keith Pitt MP and discussed various bilateral issues of mutual interest.
Sharma, who is on an official visit to Australia from September 18 to September 20, yesterday attended an event in connection with 'Confluence-the Festival of India' at the iconic Sydney Opera House.
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