Fake Ukrainian authorities allegedly wanted to sell “Scythian gold” at auction
Users of social networks broadcasting pro-Russian rhetoric are distributing a video allegedly from the American media company Bloomberg that the Ukrainian authorities tried to sell the Crimean collection of “Scythian gold”, recently received from the Netherlands, at an online auction at Sotheby’s. They say they tried to block the auction, but this does not mean that valuables worth $20 million will not be sold elsewhere. However, this information is not true.
The specialists from the StopFake project drew attention to it. There is no specified material on the official website and social networks of Bloomberg. Despite the use of the media company’s logo by propagandists, the discrepancy between the video’s design (font and caption design) and the official version indicates that it is a fake. It should also be noted that Bloomberg publishes most of its videos without a logo. Those videos that did have the logo were first broadcast on Bloomberg TV, after which some of them were published on the agency’s social networks. In addition, Bloomberg journalists, using publicly available media content in their videos, always indicate the original source, which is not the case in the video about the sale of Scythian gold distributed online. It is a compilation of publicly available photos and videos. In particular, to create this video, propagandists used several videos from auctions published by Sotheby's, as well as an excerpt from an interview with Ukrainian politician Hennadii Korban.
The assertion that Ukraine allegedly tried to sell the exhibits through Sotheby's auction is meaningless. The fact is that the gold artifacts from Crimea, known as Scythian gold, returned to Ukraine from the Netherlands, belong to the Museum Fund of Ukraine and are under state protection. Exhibition “Crimea. Golden Island in the Black Sea”, which was exhibited on the eve of the annexation of Crimea at the Allard Pearson Museum, included 584 exhibits from five Ukrainian museums (Museum of Historical Treasures of Ukraine, Central Museum of Taurida, Bakhchisarai Historical and Cultural Museum, Kernik Museum and “Chersonese Tauride”). After the Supreme Court of the Netherlands confirmed the decision to return the Crimean artifacts to Ukraine, the items were delivered to the National Museum of the History of Ukraine, where they are still stored. It is also important to note that before lots are put up for sale, they are carefully checked by Sotheby's lawyers and art experts. All these measures virtually exclude the possibility of illegal sale of “Scythian gold” returned to Ukraine.
Propagandists spread such fakes to discredit the Ukrainian authorities. Like, everything is so bad that they have to sell historical artifacts. However, this is not so; in particular, the National Museum of the History of Ukraine took responsibility for storing the collection.