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				 Located in the heart of Cairo on Tahrir Square, the Egyptian 
				Museum has long been the foremost home for the country's 
				bounteous collection of antiquities. 
 But it will soon lose some of the treasure from King 
				Tutankhamun's tomb to the Grand Egyptian Museum, due to open 
				next year next to the Giza pyramids, while a collection of royal 
				mummies is being transferred to another new site in Cairo, the 
				National Museum of Egyptian Civilization.
 
 The initial restructuring of the Egyptian Museum will include 
				the redisplay of several galleries near the entrance and the 
				relocation of the Tanis Royal Tombs to the space vacated by the 
				Tutankhamun collection.
 
 Financed by 3.1 million euros of EU funding and backed by a 
				consortium of five European museums including the British Museum 
				and the Louvre, the project will also develop a long-term vision 
				for the museum and, officials hope, allow it to win a listing as 
				a UNESCO world heritage site.
 
				
				 
				
 Egyptian Antiquities Minister Khaled El-Enany repeated a promise 
				that new museums would not pose a threat, and that the Egyptian 
				Museum, which houses more than 150,000 objects, should get "all 
				the support and attention it deserves".
 
 "The time has come to shed a new light on the museum's rich 
				collection, upgrade its physical structure and improve its 
				research and programing activities to reach the highest 
				international standards," he told a launch event in the museum's 
				garden.
 
 The apparently casual management and display of artefacts at the 
				Egyptian Museum surprises some visitors. In 2014 employees 
				damaged King Tutankhamun's golden burial mask by gluing its 
				dislodged beard back on.
 
 But it charms many others with its old-fashioned feel.
 
 Some display cases date back to the mid-19th century when the 
				collections were displayed elsewhere in Cairo, and there are 
				signs have not been changed since the museum opened in 1902, 
				museum director Sabah Abdel Razek Saddik said.
 
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			For Egyptologists, the museum is the "mother" of Egyptian museums, 
			said Friederike Seyfried, director of the Egyptian Museum of Berlin, 
			which is also participating in the project.
 "Nothing can be compared with the Egyptian Museum at Tahrir and this 
			will never change," she said.
 
 "New-build museums will be beacons of modern achievements in 
			museology but the Egyptian museum at Tahrir reflects the history of 
			our science."
 
 Tourism is a key sector in Egypt's economy and a major source of 
			foreign revenue. It has been gradually recovering from the political 
			turmoil and security problems that followed the "Arab Spring" civil 
			unrest of 2011.
 
 Enany said he was aggrieved that Egypt had to confront the continued 
			loss of antiquities through looting and smuggling.
 
 The government is currently battling to prevent the auction of an 
			18th Dynasty quartzite sculpture god Amen in the likeness of King 
			Tutankhamun scheduled for next month at Christie's in London.
 
 "I'm deeply saddened to see every now and then some Egyptian 
			antiquities put on sale in the international market. We have 
			succeeded in the ministry in the last few years in repatriating 
			thousands of objects and will continue to do so," Enany said.
 
 He appealed to foreign ambassadors and cultural attaches, 
			international organizations, and UNESCO "to join efforts to stop the 
			looting, selling and illicit trafficking of antiquities".
 
 (Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)
 
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