Trafficking in cultural property source of enormous illicit profits: UN official
New York, Nov 6 (Just Earth News/IBNS): Trafficking in cultural property has increasingly come to the attention of the international community and represents a source of enormous illicit profits, an official from UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) stressed on Thursday at a special event in St. Petersburg, Russia.
“In recent years, the world has witnessed the growing involvement of violent extremists and terrorists in the destruction, looting, trafficking and sale of cultural property, in complicity with organized criminal groups,” John Brandolino, the Director of UNODC’s Division for Treaty Affairs, told delegates attending a special event of the world’s largest anti-corruption forum.
“The challenges presented by this phenomenon are complex and multi-faceted, and clearly require responses at the national level as well as strong regional and international cooperation to meet them,” he added.
Brandolino said UNODC is honoured to be part of the global initiative recently launched at UN Headquarters in New York to protect cultural heritage and mobilize the international community against the trafficking and destruction of cultural property by terrorist groups and organized criminal networks.
“There is also growing awareness and evidence of the increasing involvement of organized criminal groups in the looting, trafficking and sale of cultural property,” he explained.
According to UNODC, proceeds of transnational crime related to art and cultural property may amount to some 0.8 per cent of all illicit financial flows, between 3.4 and 6.3 billion dollars every year.
“Trafficking in cultural property is also used to launder the proceeds of crime, and has been identified as a source of financing for terrorist acts,” Brandolino added.
In addition, he noted that there have been some relatively recent pronouncements on this subject by the UN community, including at the 13th United Nations Congress on Crime Prevention and Criminal Justice, held in Doha in April, as well as by the Security Council through a number of resolutions.
Meanwhile, he recalled that both the UN and the international community have some existing tools and frameworks available, such as the Hague convention of 1954, the UN Convention Against Corruption and the United Nations Convention Against Transnational Organized Crime.
In conclusion, Brandolino emphasized the importance of getting all organizations and national authorities represented at the forum to work together in addressing the challenges posed by the looting, trafficking and sale of cultural property.
Photo: UNODC
Top Headlines
-
News
Bangladesh MP warns of refugee crisis if BJP wins West Bengal polls
May 01, 2026
-
News
Rain, protests, and slogans: TMC-BJP faceoff erupts outside Kolkata's Netaji Indoor Stadium strong room
April 30, 2026
-
News
Bengal polls: Mamata rejects exit poll projections, claims decisive TMC return to power
April 30, 2026
-
News
Operation Sindoor proved terror epicentres are not immune: Rajnath Singh at SCO meet
April 28, 2026
-
News
India, New Zealand seal historic FTA; Piyush Goyal calls it a defining milestone
April 27, 2026
-
News
Engine fire forces SWISS flight to abort in Delhi, 6 injured
April 26, 2026
-
News
Vee Technologies engineering division delivers 3,000th fire truck design for the US
April 24, 2026
-
News
'CM can't put democracy in peril by interfering with probe': SC slams Mamata Banerjee in I-PAC raid case
April 22, 2026
-
News
'India will never bow to any form of terror': PM Modi on Pahalgam terror attack anniversary
April 22, 2026
-
News
'Lots of bombs if talks fail': Trumps warning as Iran ceasefire nears end
April 20, 2026




