Tue, 21-Oct-2025

Lost Treasure Found: Libya Recovers Colonial Wolf Statue Sold as Scrap

Lost Treasure Found: Libya Recovers Colonial Wolf Statue Sold as Scrap
  • Libyan authorities recover large bronze wolf statue from a farm in Benghazi, bought as scrap by the owner.
  • Owner Saied Mohammed Bourabida bought the statue for its shape and craftsmanship, keeping it on his farm for years.
  • Owner Saied Mohammed Bourabida bought the statue for its shape and craftsmanship, keeping it on his farm for years.

Libyan authorities have recovered a large bronze wolf statue that once sat atop a pillar in central Benghazi before disappearing decades ago, found on a farm whose owner said he bought the sculpture as scrap.

Authorities were alerted to the colonial-era statue after a tip off and discovered it in a farm near Benghazi belonging to Saied Mohammed Bourabida, who told them he had bought it from a metal yard because he liked the way it looked.

“I remembered this statue in its position near the port from when I was young … I had a smelting workshop and when I saw it by chance at the scrap dealer’s I liked its shape and the quality of work so I bought it,” he said.

Bourabida, 80, kept the statue, a replica of the famous Capitoline Wolf sculpture that depicts a legendary scene of ancient Rome, in plain view under a spreading tree next to the terrace of his house.

Khaled al-Aqouri, head of the tourism and antiquities department in the Benghazi police, said he was confident that Bourabida had not known that it was still public property.

Italian colonial authorities erected the statue in the new Benghazi city centre they were building in the 1930s, promoting a connection between ancient Roman settlement of Libya and their modern colonial rule over the country.

After Libya won independence, the authorities removed the wolf from its pillar and it disappeared following Muammar Gaddafi’s seizure of power in 1969, a revolutionary period when relics of foreign colonial rule were banished from sight.

At some point the statue lost its front legs as well as the figures of two human infants suckling underneath, representing Romulus and Remus the mythical founders of Rome who were said to have been raised by a wolf.

It is now outside the antiquities department in Benghazi, propped on concrete blocks while it awaits possible restoration.

Libya was an important Roman province, home to the great port cities of Sabratha and Leptis Magna whose imposing stone temples and theatres still stand on the Mediterranean shore.

However, many priceless Libyan antiquities have disappeared: pillaged by Europeans in colonial times, appropriated after independence or looted in the chaos that has followed a 2011 NATO-backed uprising.

Khaled al-Hadar, a Libyan researcher on stolen antiquities, said heritage monitoring remained weak in Libya and had not been started until 1974 – after the wolf had disappeared.

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Tonnes of uranium have gone missing from a Libyan location, says UN

Uranium
  • Two and a half tonnes of uranium had gone missing from a plant in Libya.
  • They discovered that ten drums carrying uranium ore had vanished.
  • There are concerns about uranium being a radioactive risk.

The UN‘s nuclear watchdog has reported that two and a half tonnes of uranium had gone missing from a plant in Libya.

The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) issued the warning following a visit to the unnamed facility by its inspectors earlier this week.

According to the IAEA, they discovered that ten drums carrying uranium ore had vanished.

There are concerns about uranium being a radioactive risk, as well as nuclear security problems.

In a statement, the IAEA said it would conduct further actions “to clarify the circumstances of the removal of the nuclear material and its current location”.

It is unknown when the uranium vanished. Inspectors reportedly wanted to visit the site last year, but the trip was cancelled due to fighting between various Libyan groups.

According to the IAEA, the uranium storage location was not on government-controlled territory.

Libya has been divided into opposing political and military factions since the overthrow of former tyrant Colonel Muammar Gaddafi in 2011.

It is presently divided between an interim government in Tripoli and another in the east.

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Libya
  • Important political figures in Libya rejected it.
  • Rights groups and local observers have also criticized the two countries.
  • Mr. Aoun’s arguments criticized the agreement for raising the Italian side’s stake from 30% to 37%.

Libya: The Government of National Unity (GNU), located in Tripoli, and the Italian government oversaw an $8 billion (£6.4 billion) gas production deal, but important political figures in Libya rejected it.

Rights groups and local observers have also criticized the two countries’ memorandums of understanding aimed at reducing Mediterranean migration flows.

When Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni and an accompanying group visited Tripoli on Saturday, the energy agreement was signed between Libya’s National Oil Corporation (NOC) and Italian energy corporation Eni, and the memoranda was signed by the foreign ministers of the two nations.

Shortly after the gas agreement was signed, the GNU’s outspoken oil and gas minister Mohammed Aoun told Al-WTV Wasat’s that it was “illegal” and “lacks equity between the Libyan and Italian sides.”

The contract, which he emphasized was illegal and promised to “rectify,” was “bypassed,” according to him, and his government.

In a formal statement published on Sunday, the ministry reiterated Mr. Aoun’s arguments and criticized the agreement for raising the Italian side’s stake from 30% to 37%.

After the agreement was signed on Saturday, a reporter from the pro-GNU Lana news organization questioned NOC chairman Farhat Bengdara about Mr. Aoun’s absence from the ceremony.

Mr. Bengdara’s firm “works according to the law, and whoever perceives this approach as illegal must go before the court,” he responded, using strong language.

He stated that the NOC negotiation team had been approved by GNU ministries and that the government was recognized internationally.

A “message to foreign oil corporations” to return and continue energy development in Libya, he added, as well as a “clear indication that the oil sector in Libya is free of hazards,” were also included in his description of the agreement.

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Libya desert
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  • Libya’s southern borders with Chad, Niger, and Sudan have become notorious for people smuggling.
  • The sparsely populated region regularly sees summer temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius (104 Fahrenheit).

 

Twenty people were discovered dead in the desert in Libya following a vehicle breakdown near the border with Chad, with rescuers assuming they died of thirst.

A team “recovered 20 bodies found in the desert after their vehicle broke down,” according to rescue services in Kufra’s southeastern region.

The vehicle had come from neighboring Chad and reached some 120 kilometers (75 miles) into Libyan territory before breaking down, the statement added.

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