Dubai Telegraph - France backs returning colonial-era 'talking drum' to I.Coast

EUR -
AED 4.189195
AFN 71.863394
ALL 94.21881
AMD 419.878305
ANG 2.0423
AOA 1046.015122
ARS 1685.364164
AUD 1.653202
AWG 2.054673
AZN 1.920848
BAM 1.956208
BBD 2.297479
BDT 140.589301
BGN 1.928775
BHD 0.43008
BIF 3393.577513
BMD 1.140693
BND 1.475495
BOB 7.899473
BRL 5.892711
BSD 1.140738
BTN 107.784101
BWP 15.501891
BYN 3.30816
BYR 22357.577591
BZD 2.294158
CAD 1.620263
CDF 2586.528836
CHF 0.922193
CLF 0.026738
CLP 1052.380215
CNY 7.7546
CNH 7.753568
COP 3927.348049
CRC 517.403297
CUC 1.140693
CUP 30.228357
CVE 110.287502
CZK 24.260478
DJF 203.127882
DKK 7.474321
DOP 67.833543
DZD 151.910582
EGP 56.181859
ERN 17.110391
ETB 183.900797
FJD 2.562851
FKP 0.864482
GBP 0.862141
GEL 3.017169
GGP 0.864482
GHS 12.901406
GIP 0.864482
GMD 83.270405
GNF 10000.040297
GTQ 8.702737
GYD 238.604499
HKD 8.945672
HNL 30.527095
HRK 7.534618
HTG 149.089765
HUF 354.307207
IDR 20363.646692
ILS 3.394844
IMP 0.864482
INR 107.777839
IQD 1494.29833
IRR 1568737.682503
ISK 144.012701
JEP 0.864482
JMD 179.617434
JOD 0.808737
JPY 184.627988
KES 147.69709
KGS 99.753682
KHR 4586.915757
KMF 495.06024
KPW 1026.62386
KRW 1760.750652
KWD 0.353284
KYD 0.950577
KZT 553.843289
LAK 25584.107754
LBP 102147.450057
LKR 383.556575
LRD 207.598716
LSL 18.742142
LTL 3.368169
LVL 0.689994
LYD 7.328495
MAD 10.689528
MDL 20.16176
MGA 4853.969073
MKD 61.683271
MMK 2395.055099
MNT 4083.597231
MOP 9.214719
MRU 45.525488
MUR 53.886625
MVR 17.623409
MWK 1977.968883
MXN 19.93425
MYR 4.643751
MZN 72.886627
NAD 18.742306
NGN 1576.175339
NIO 41.978381
NOK 11.327648
NPR 172.45643
NZD 2.017583
OMR 0.438622
PAB 1.140713
PEN 3.895378
PGK 5.008044
PHP 69.788675
PKR 317.197427
PLN 4.287299
PYG 6946.447724
QAR 4.158067
RON 5.241469
RSD 117.358512
RUB 88.6904
RWF 1674.512289
SAR 4.285055
SBD 9.184804
SCR 16.994393
SDG 684.415923
SEK 11.086319
SGD 1.47544
SHP 0.851642
SLE 28.290723
SLL 23919.760471
SOS 651.930155
SRD 42.756578
STD 23610.03655
STN 24.505107
SVC 9.981036
SYP 126.083161
SZL 18.737741
THB 37.928601
TJS 10.574072
TMT 3.992425
TND 3.378804
TOP 2.746515
TRY 53.20463
TTD 7.754548
TWD 36.377855
TZS 2997.179274
UAH 51.19487
UGX 4180.871344
USD 1.140693
UYU 45.899566
UZS 13747.865222
VES 708.08842
VND 29988.811984
VUV 135.946941
WST 3.172133
XAF 656.087985
XAG 0.01955
XAU 0.000282
XCD 3.082779
XCG 2.05581
XDR 0.817159
XOF 656.090861
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.197797
ZAR 18.725253
ZMK 10267.599495
ZMW 20.651851
ZWL 367.302595
  • RBGPF

    0.2000

    61.5

    +0.33%

  • BTI

    -0.5600

    62.2

    -0.9%

  • RIO

    -0.2700

    93.47

    -0.29%

  • CMSC

    0.0650

    21.995

    +0.3%

  • BCE

    -0.1850

    22.735

    -0.81%

  • AZN

    0.9200

    189.33

    +0.49%

  • RELX

    0.1650

    31.505

    +0.52%

  • NGG

    0.4500

    83.46

    +0.54%

  • RYCEF

    0.7500

    18.75

    +4%

  • BCC

    -2.3200

    78.7

    -2.95%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    12.8

    +0.08%

  • VOD

    -0.2200

    13.67

    -1.61%

  • GSK

    -0.1900

    52.31

    -0.36%

  • BP

    0.4250

    37.555

    +1.13%

  • CMSD

    0.0150

    21.785

    +0.07%

France backs returning colonial-era 'talking drum' to I.Coast
France backs returning colonial-era 'talking drum' to I.Coast / Photo: STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN - AFP

France backs returning colonial-era 'talking drum' to I.Coast

France's parliament on Monday approved returning to Ivory Coast a "talking drum" that colonial troops took from the Ebrie tribe in 1916, in the latest boost to the repatriation of colonial spoils.

Text size:

The Djidji Ayokwe drum is a communication tool more than three metres (10 feet) long and weighing 430 kilogrammes (almost 950 pounds) that was once used to transmit messages between different areas, for example to warn others of a forced recruitment drive.

France's lower house of parliament approved removing the artefact from the national museum collections to enable its return, after the upper-house Senate backed the move in April.

The talking drum had been in the care of the Quai Branly-Jacques Chirac Museum in Paris.

In late 2018, Ivory Coast asked Paris to return the Djidji Ayokwe among 148 works of art taken during the colonial period.

President Emmanuel Macron promised in 2021 to send the drum and other artefacts back home to the west African country.

"Local communities have been requesting it since independence" in 1960, said Serge Alain Nhiang'O, the founder of the Ivoire Black History Month association in Abidjan.

The drum's return "could become very symbolic", he said.

Clavaire Aguego Mobio, leader of the Ebrie, in 2021 called Macron's pledge "a highly historic move" as his people had long given up on the return of the drum, "which was our loudspeaker, our Facebook".

- Slow repatriations -

Since his election in 2017, Macron has gone further than his predecessors in admitting to past French abuses in Africa.

The restitution of looted artworks to Africa is one of the highlights of the "new relationship" he wanted to establish with the continent.

France still has in its possession tens of thousands of artworks and other prized artefacts that it looted from its colonial empire from the 16th to the first half of the 20th century.

According to a 2018 report, some 90,000 objects from sub-Saharan Africa are in French public museums.

But restitutions of such cultural objects have been slow without overarching legislation to help.

In late 2020, parliament adopted an exceptional law to permanently return 26 artefacts from the royal treasures of Abomey to Benin, as well as a sabre to Senegal.

In 2023, France adopted two so-called framework laws to return objects in two categories: one for goods looted from Jewish families during World War II, and another for the repatriation of human remains from public collections.

- New bill? -

The State Council, which acts as legal adviser to the government, last year rejected a similar blanket bill to permit the return of all colonial spoils.

According to Le Monde newspaper, which obtained a copy of its opinion, it did not deem "cultural cooperation" with former colonies to be sufficient justification.

It said that it was not enough of a "higher general interest" to justify breaking out the objects from inalienable national museum collections, Le Monde reported.

Culture Minister Rachida Dati said last week that a new version of the bill was to be presented at a government meeting by the end of the month.

She said that she hoped for a debate in parliament by the end of the year.

Macron has set up several commissions of historians to explore past relations between France and former colonies such as Cameroon, Algeria, Senegal and Haiti.

H.Yousef--DT