Amal
Alamuddin Clooney gets back to work in Greece
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[October 10, 2014]
LONDON (Reuters) - Human rights lawyer Amal
Alamuddin Clooney, fresh from her marriage to Hollywood
heart-throb George Clooney last month, is heading to
Athens to advise the Greek government in its battle to
repatriate the ancient Elgin Marbles statues from
Britain.
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The Lebanese-born Alamuddin, who married Clooney in a
star-studded ceremony in Venice, will meet Greece's Prime
Minister Antonis Samaras and Culture Minister Konstantinos
Tasoulas alongside her boss Geoffrey Robertson, their Doughty
Street Chambers said on Thursday.
"Mr Robertson and Mrs Clooney were first asked to provide legal
advice to the Greek government on this matter in 2011. They will
be holding a series of meetings with government officials during
their stay," the chambers added in a statement.
The pair will be in Athens from Oct. 13 to 16.
The Marbles are a set of ancient Greek sculptures taken to
London after being removed from the Acropolis in Athens by a
British aristocrat, Lord Elgin, while Athens was under Ottoman
control in the 19th Century. Greece has sought their return from
the British Museum for decades, to no avail.
In March, George Clooney backed their return to Greece while
promoting his film "The Monuments Men."
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The Trustees of the British Museum maintain that the marbles legally
belong to the museum. Greece says it is no longer an issue of
ownership and that it would accept them back as a permanent loan.
To do so, the Greek government would first have to relinquish its
claim to them, the British Museum says.
Alamuddin Clooney, who is based in Britain, has represented
Ukrainian former Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko at the European
Court of Human Rights and WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange in
extradition proceedings. She also advised former United Nations
Secretary General Kofi Annan on the conflict in Syria.
(Reporting By Ahmed Aboulenein; Editing by Larry King)
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