NEWS
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| Former palace of Saddam Hussein opening as Iraq culture hub later this year |
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| POSTED 13 Apr 2016 . BY Tom Anstey |
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The palace was used as a mess hall for the British army between 2004 and 2008
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Iraq is planning to open its first new major museum since its occupation in 2003, with an art institution to open inside the former palace of President Saddam Hussein later this year.
Funded through UK-based charity Friends of Basra Museum and oil company donations, the former stronghold of Hussein in Basra will become “the principal museum in southern Iraq and a model museum for the region”, according to the Iraqi government.
Following Hussein’s capture in late 2003, the palace was used as a mess hall for the British army. In 2010, the palace was handed over to Iraq’s State Board of Antiquities when the plan for a culture hub was devised.
The palace, currently undergoing a US$3.5m (€3m, £2.5m) redevelopment, will be split into four sections exhibiting artefacts from the civilisations of Sumer, Babylon and Assyria, while there will also be an area dedicated to Islamic art. The palace will hold around 4,000 works, many of which will come from Baghdad’s semi-operational Iraq Museum.
The palace has suffered significant damage from car bombings since the US occupation of Iraq, so safety is at the heart of the redevelopment with steel doors installed at the entrance for extra security, while money is also going towards repairs and curatorial support.
“We want to make this a heritage area with hotels and restaurants and a heritage museum, but being sure that people still live here,” said Qahtan al-Abeed, director of Iraq’s State Board of Antiquities and Heritage for Basra, speaking to National Geographic. “We want to make this like Granada in Spain, but this is a 15-to 20-year project.
“Most people from Basra came here recently from the countryside, and they have no idea of culture. You have to first lay the foundation. And I want to help my country.”
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Italy calls for UN force to protect ancient heritage sites
POSTED 23 Mar 2015. BY Tom Anstey

Italy’s minister for culture has backed plans for the creation of a UN peacekeeping force to protect
heritage sites across the world, following the destruction of Iraq’s ancient cities by the Islamic State
(ISIS).
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Iraq calls for coalition air support to protect historical sites
POSTED 10 Mar 2015. BY Tom Anstey

Iraq’s tourism and antiquities minister, Adel Fahad al-Shershab, has said the US-led
coalition carrying out air strikes against the radical Islamic State (IS) must try to protect
the country’s archaeological sites being destroyed by the terrorist group.
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| DIARY |

15-18 Jun 2026

HLTH Europe

RAI Convention Centre,
Amsterdam,
Netherlands
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