Hundreds of books at the Louvre damaged in water leak just weeks after £76m heist | World News

Hundreds of books at the Louvre damaged in water leak just weeks after £76m heist | World News

Just weeks after the famous Paris museum lost jewels worth £76m, a water leak at the Louvre has damaged hundreds of books.

The Louvre’s deputy administrator Francis Steinbock told French broadcaster BFM TV the leak affected one of the three rooms of the Egyptian antiquities department’s library.

Staff, he said, have identified between 300 and 400 damaged works, and the count is still ongoing.

He added that the volumes lost included those consulted by Egyptologists, but did not include any precious books.

Mr. Steinbock also acknowledged the problem had been known for years and said repairs were scheduled for September of next year.

The leak, which took place last month but has only been revealed today, underscores concerns over the deteriorating state of the world’s most-visited museum.

In November, the Campana gallery – which houses ancient Greek ceramics – was temporarily closed due to structural weaknesses.

The gallery’s nine rooms are adjacent to the Apollo Gallery, which was targeted by thieves who stole some of the French Crown Jewels in October.

Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player

2:36

Louvre: How ‘heist of the century’ unfolded
The audacious smash-and-grab saw two men escape with £76m-worth of jewels after accessing the museum’s first floor with a furniture lift and cracking open display cases with angle grinders – all while the Paris museum was open to visitors.

French police have made multiple arrests in relation to the theft but the stolen artefacts have not been recovered.

Read more:
Louvre director offers to resign
Prosecutor furious over heist arrest leaks

Before the heist, the Louvre’s top administrator had warned about conditions inside the museum, which was visited by 8.7 million people last year.

Valerie Baud from the CFDT, a French trade union federation, said staff representatives had been warning about the state of the building for years because “it affects working conditions and visitors”.

“But we didn’t realise it was this bad,” she said. “It is a major deterioration in the situation.”

Source link