| 
				 The artist Belal Khaled had paid 700 shekels ($175) for the 
				image of a goddess holding her head in her hand, which had been 
				spray-painted on Rabea Darduna's iron-and-brick doorway as it 
				stood among the ruins of his home, destroyed in the July-August 
				war with Israel. 
				 
				Banksy, a British street artist famed for his ironic murals in 
				unexpected places, visited Gaza this year and left several 
				paintings on the outside walls of buildings, some of them ruins. 
				His pieces regularly sell for more than $500,000. 
				 
				Khaled, 23, told Reuters that police seized the painting from 
				his home in Khan Younis, southern Gaza. They were accompanied by 
				Darduna, a civil servant. 
				 
				"The policemen took the door away and they told me it would be 
				held in accordance with a court order because there was a 
				lawsuit against me," Khaled said. "I am the true owner of the 
				door now, and I will seek to establish this in court." 
				 
				A police spokesman had no immediate comment, but Darduna's 
				lawyer, Mohammed Rihan, confirmed the claims to the Bansky 
				painting were under court review. 
				 
				"I will seek to return the door to its true owner, Rabea Darduna. 
				My client was cheated," Rihan said. 
				 
				After buying the painting from Darduna, Khaled said last week he 
				had wanted to protect the Banksy mural from neglect and that he 
				had always wanted to own a work by the reclusive artist, who is 
				from Bristol in the west of England and has never revealed his 
				true identity. 
				 
				Khaled has said he had no plans to sell the doorway "at the 
				present time". A Banksy mural painted on a shop in London in 
				2013 sold at a private auction for $1.1 million. 
				 
				(Editing by Dan Williams) 
				
			[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. 
				   | 
				
				
				 |