South Korea Supreme Court rejects temple’s claim to 700-year-old looted statue

The ruling effectively ends the protracted legal dispute over this roughly 50cm statue of a sitting Buddhist Bodhisattva. PHOTO: EPA-EFE

SEOUL - South Korea’s Supreme Court rejected on Thursday a Buddhist temple’s claim to a 700-year-old statue purportedly looted by Japanese pirates in the 14th century, paving the way for the artefact’s return to Japan.

The ruling effectively ends the protracted legal dispute over the roughly 50cm statue of a sitting Buddhist Bodhisattva, which was stolen from a Japanese temple by South Korean thieves in 2012.

The thieves were caught trying to sell it after returning home, and the statue passed into South Korean government custody, but the Buseok temple – about 100km south of Seoul – filed a lawsuit in 2016 asserting ownership and demanding it be returned.

A South Korean court initially sided with the Buseok temple, saying the piece was taken away to Japan by “abnormal” means equivalent to “plundering”.

But an appellate court in February overturned the ruling, acknowledging that the Japanese temple – Kannon in Nagasaki Prefecture – had ownership over the statue.

The Supreme Court on Thursday upheld that verdict, saying the Japanese temple had legal rights to the statue, even as it acknowledged the validity of the South Korean temple’s claim that the piece was crafted and stored there originally.

“We can view that this statue was manufactured and stored at the Buseok Temple,” the court said in its verdict.

But the Kannon temple had “acquired legal rights” to the artefact in 1973, in accordance with Japanese laws.

“High probabilities that this statue was looted by the Japanese pirates during the Goryeo dynasty do not overturn the assumption of the Japanese temple’s ownership,” the ruling said, referring to the ancient dynasty that ruled Korea from 918 to 1392.

It also noted that the Kannon temple had owned the statue from 1953, until it was removed by the South Korean robbers in 2012.

Considering these factors, the South Korean Buseok temple “loses its ownership rights even though it is acknowledged as the statue’s original creator”, the court said.

The statue is currently being held at the National Research Institute of Cultural Heritage in the central Korean city of Daejeon, according to Yonhap news agency. AFP

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