<p>The <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tag/switzerland" target="_blank">Swiss</a> on Wednesday handed a large stone-carved head back to <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tag/peru" target="_blank">Peru</a>, where it was sculpted around 2,500 years ago by one of the country's earliest civilisations, the culture office said.</p>.<p>The monolithic sculpture, which weighs almost 200 kilogrammes (440 pounds), was brought into Switzerland by truck in 2016 from Germany at the request of a German art dealer.</p>.<p>Switzerland's Federal Office of Culture (FOC) said in a statement that the sculpture had not been properly declared as a cultural property. It was later confiscated as there was "substantiated suspicion" it had been illegally taken from Peru.</p>.<p>FOC head Carine Bachmann presented the decorative stone sculpture to Peruvian ambassador Luis Alberto Castro Joo at the Basel-Weil am Rhein customs office, where the piece was discovered seven years ago.</p>.<p>After it was discovered, FOC specialists reviewed the piece and determined that the "2,500-year-old stone head from the pre-Hispanic Chavin culture (circa 1200 to 550 BC) originates in what is now Peru," Wednesday's statement said.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/australia-blocks-coal-mine-near-great-barrier-reef-1189193.html" target="_blank">Australia blocks coal mine near Great Barrier Reef</a></strong></p>.<p>"That makes it a significant piece of cultural property that should have been declared as such when it was imported."</p>.<p>Peru is heavily affected by the plundering and destruction of archaeological sites.</p>.<p>And pre-Columbian pieces like the stone head returned Wednesday are among Peru's most endangered categories of cultural property, the FOC said.</p>.<p>Switzerland and Peru are both signatories of a 1970 UNESCO convention banning the illegal import and export of cultural property.</p>.<p>The two countries also signed a bilateral deal in 2016 to strengthen their cooperation on the issue.</p>.<p>"This restitution underlines the shared commitment of Switzerland and Peru to combating the illegal transfer of cultural property," the FOC said.</p>
<p>The <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tag/switzerland" target="_blank">Swiss</a> on Wednesday handed a large stone-carved head back to <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/tag/peru" target="_blank">Peru</a>, where it was sculpted around 2,500 years ago by one of the country's earliest civilisations, the culture office said.</p>.<p>The monolithic sculpture, which weighs almost 200 kilogrammes (440 pounds), was brought into Switzerland by truck in 2016 from Germany at the request of a German art dealer.</p>.<p>Switzerland's Federal Office of Culture (FOC) said in a statement that the sculpture had not been properly declared as a cultural property. It was later confiscated as there was "substantiated suspicion" it had been illegally taken from Peru.</p>.<p>FOC head Carine Bachmann presented the decorative stone sculpture to Peruvian ambassador Luis Alberto Castro Joo at the Basel-Weil am Rhein customs office, where the piece was discovered seven years ago.</p>.<p>After it was discovered, FOC specialists reviewed the piece and determined that the "2,500-year-old stone head from the pre-Hispanic Chavin culture (circa 1200 to 550 BC) originates in what is now Peru," Wednesday's statement said.</p>.<p><strong>Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/world-news-politics/australia-blocks-coal-mine-near-great-barrier-reef-1189193.html" target="_blank">Australia blocks coal mine near Great Barrier Reef</a></strong></p>.<p>"That makes it a significant piece of cultural property that should have been declared as such when it was imported."</p>.<p>Peru is heavily affected by the plundering and destruction of archaeological sites.</p>.<p>And pre-Columbian pieces like the stone head returned Wednesday are among Peru's most endangered categories of cultural property, the FOC said.</p>.<p>Switzerland and Peru are both signatories of a 1970 UNESCO convention banning the illegal import and export of cultural property.</p>.<p>The two countries also signed a bilateral deal in 2016 to strengthen their cooperation on the issue.</p>.<p>"This restitution underlines the shared commitment of Switzerland and Peru to combating the illegal transfer of cultural property," the FOC said.</p>