Egyptians reacted with outrage this week after officials said that a 3000-year-old bracelet that had belonged to an ancient pharaoh was stolen from Cairo's famed Egyptian Museum and then melted down for gold.
Tourism and Antiquities Minister Sherif Fathy said in televised comments late Saturday that the bracelet was stolen on September 9 while officials at the museum were preparing artefacts for an exhibit in Italy.
He blamed “laxity” in implementing procedures at the facility and said that prosecutors were still investigating.
The bracelet, containing a lapis lazuli bead, belonged to Pharaoh Amenemope, who reigned about 3000 years ago.
Authorities said it was taken from a restoration lab at the museum and then funnelled through a chain of dealers before being melted down.
The minister said the lab didn't have security cameras.
Four suspects have been arrested, including a restoration specialist at the museum who confessed to giving the bracelet to an acquaintance who owns a silver shop in Cairo’s Sayyeda Zainab district.

It was allegedly later sold to the owner of a gold workshop for the equivalent of about NZ$6500.
It was eventually sold for around NZ$6800 to a worker at another gold workshop, who melted the bracelet down to make other gold jewellery. The suspects confessed to their crimes and the money was seized, the ministry said in a statement on Thursday.
The ministry also released security camera video showing a shop owner receiving a bracelet, weighing it, and then paying one of the suspects.
Local media reported Sunday that a judge ordered the restoration specialist and her acquaintance to remain in detention for 15 more days pending further investigations.
He ordered the release of the two remaining suspects if they posted bail set at 10,000 Egyptian pounds (NZ$350) each.
The loss of a treasure that had survived for three millennia was painful to many people in Egypt, where there is great esteem for the nation's ancient heritage.
Some questioned security measures at the museum and called for tightening these measures around the country’s treasures.
Monica Hanna, a prominent Egyptian archaeologist, called for suspending overseas exhibits “until better control” is implemented to secure the artefacts.
Hanna is the dean at the Arab Academy for Science, Technology & Maritime Transport, and campaigns for the return of Egyptian artefacts exhibited in museums overseas.
Malek Adly, an Egyptian human rights lawyer, called the theft “an alarm bell” for the government and said better security is needed for antiquities in exhibition halls and those in storage.
Amenemope ruled Egypt from Tanis in the Nile Delta during Egypt’s 21st Dynasty.
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The Tanis royal necropolis was discovered by the French archaeologist Pierre Montet in 1940, according to the Egyptian Museum.
The necropolis’ collection exhibits about 2500 ancient artefacts, including golden funerary masks, silver coffins and golden jewels. The collection was restored in 2021 in cooperation with the Louvre Museum in Paris.
The theft reminded some of past cultural losses, including the disappearance of Vincent van Gogh’s “Poppy Flowers” — then valued at US$50 million — from another Cairo museum in 2010. The painting was first stolen in 1977 but was later recovered.
However, since its theft in 2010 it has not been found.
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