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Germans convicted of stealing from Egypt’s great pyramid

Arab World Materials 12 November 2014 08:10 (UTC +04:00)
An Egyptian court sentenced three Germans and six Egyptians to five years jail for stealing fragments of a pharaonic artifact from Cairo’s Great Pyramid
Germans convicted of stealing from Egypt’s great pyramid

A picture taken on November 9, 2014, shows tourists walking past the pyramids of Menkaure (L) and Khafre (R) in Giza, on the outskirts of Cairo, Al Arabia news agency reported referring to AFP.

An Egyptian court sentenced three Germans and six Egyptians to five years jail for stealing fragments of a pharaonic artifact from Cairo's Great Pyramid.

A court in Giza, south of the capital, sentenced in absentia three Germans - who had claimed they were researchers - for stealing pieces of an ancient scroll bearing the name of the Pharaoh Khufu as well as rock samples, a judicial source said.

The Great Pyramid - also known as the Pyramid of Cheops - is the biggest and most famous of the three Giza pyramids. It houses the tomb of Pharaoh Khufu, and is the only surviving one of the seven wonders of the ancient world.

Six Egyptians, including three employees of the antiquities ministry, two pyramid guards and the director of a travel agency, were also jailed for five years for aiding the robbery, the source said.

The crime was discovered at the end of 2013 by Egyptian authorities, who announced in August that the missing fragments had been recovered.

The judicial source said that the German researchers took the scroll pieces in order to determine their age and bolster an unorthodox theory that the pyramids may be several millennia older than the construction period accepted by most Egyptologists.

The source said the court also ordered an inquiry to determine the role in the theft of Egypt's former head of antiquities, Zawi Hawass.

"These remarks are totally unfounded," Hawass said.

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