TEHRAN, Feb. 3 (Mehr News Agency) --
About 700 Iranologists and Iranian cultural heritage lovers have recently signed
a petition asking President Barack Obama to prevent confiscation of Iran's 300
Achaemenid clay tablets loaned to the University of Chicago's Oriental
Institute.
The petition has been organized by the European Iranologist Society (Societas
Iranologica Europaea, SIE) in its website
www.societasiranologicaeu.org.

Battle over Persepolis Fortification Archive: Achaemenid Administrative Archives
The petition reads the artifacts "being cultural property, should not be
considered as a common property, whose financial value can be exploited for the
purpose of legal compensation."
"The antiquities belong to the cultural heritage of Iran on behalf of human
kind and should therefore remain in public hands.
"We therefore, well aware of the separation of powers, nevertheless apply to
you in order that this unconscionable decision with irreversible consequences
should be avoided.
"A country such as the United States should not be complicit in the sale of
the world's cultural heritage."
The SIE based in Rome is an European association of scholars working in the
field of Iranian Studies with members not only from European countries, but from
all over the world, including Asia and America.
In spring 2006, U.S. District Court Judge Blanche Manning ruled that a group
of people injured by a 1997 bombing in Israel could seize the 300 clay tablets
loaned to the University of Chicago and the university cannot protect Iran's
ownership rights to the artifacts.

source: Oriental
Institute
Following Iranian officials' protests against the ruling, the court was
slated to reexamine the case on December 21, 2006, but the court session was
postponed to January 19, 2007, allegedly due to the fact that Iran had not
provided all the documents necessary to the court.
The court session was held on the abovementioned date, but no verdict was
issued.
The Oriental Institute holds 8000 to 10,000 intact and about 11,000
fragmented tablets, as estimated by Gil Stein, the director of the university's
Oriental Institute.
The tablets were discovered by the University of Chicago archaeologists in
1933 while they were excavating in Persepolis, the site of a major Oriental
Institute excavation.
The artifacts bear cuneiform script explaining administrative details of the
Achaemenid Empire from about 500 BC. They are among a group of tens of thousands
of tablets and tablet fragments that were loaned to the university's Oriental
Institute in 1937 for study. A group of 179 complete tablets was returned in
1948, and another group of more than 37,000 tablet fragments was returned in
1951.