FOR ANYONE THINKING ABOUT moving to Nepal to live the dream life of an academic/explorer, now might be a good time to reconsider. On May 17, a team of Kathmandu police swept through a royal palace turned residence in the city's affluent Naxal neighborhood, where the American adventurer Ian Baker had lived for 14 years. They seized more than a hundred items, including Tibetan scroll paintings, old wooden statuettes, a tiger–skin meditation seat, and tanned pelts from an endangered red panda, a tiger, and a leopard. Baker, 50, was charged with possession of antiquities and endangered–animal hides. Although he was in Bangkok, on his way back to Nepal from a U.S. lecture tour, his gardener was home and was taken into custody.
The curious thing is that Baker, a scholar of Tibetan Buddhism and perhaps the most prominent figure in the Nepalese capital's thriving expat community, has openly displayed this stuff in his home for years. The raid supposedly was spurred by an anonymous tip, but it came just 11 days before a new, democratically elected Maoist government took power, abolished the monarchy, and forced King Gyanendra to vacate the Kathmandu palace.
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| "Many houses have these skins of pandas and tigers," says Hemanta Mishra, a conservationist. "As long as people didn't deal or trade or barter, the law was not really enforced." |
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For these and other reasons, Baker is pointing a finger right back at the government,arguing that he was targeted by bureaucrats from the ousted monarchy who are trying to grab what they can before they lose their posts. He says he can explain where he got each of the seized items, and he insists that all of what he had is legal.
"The whole Kathmandu Valley would be under arrest if this were a legitimate case," says Baker, who's been staying with friends at an undisclosed location in the United States since the raid. "I've got one friend with two stuffed tigers, another with leopard heads on his walls. I don't know a single foreigner who doesn't have something over one hundred years old."
Baker, a graduate of Middlebury and Oxford, first arrived in Nepal in 1977 to study Tibetan scroll painting as a college junior. Later, after earning a master's in English literature at Oxford, he established himself as an expert in Himalayan culture. In the eighties, he settled in Kathmandu and began leading expeditions to the Pemako region of Tibet, writing about his experiences for National Geographic. In 2004 his career reached a zenith with the publication of The Heart of the World, a lyrical account of his exploration of the remote Tsangpo Gorge and of his discovery of a 108–foot–high waterfall believed by Tibetans to be the gateway to a mystical sanctuary and the origin of the myth of Shangri–La.
During the early part of Baker's career, Nepal's ancient Himalayan culture was still relatively unexplored by Westerners. There were few local museums or established methods for the preservation of ancient artifacts. In many cases, Baker says, he took possession of objects to prevent them from being destroyed. In the process, he and other expat scholars?became the de facto curators of large personal collections. Several of Baker's rare pelts, for example, came from a palace he'd lived in earlier.
"They were going to tear the place down," says Baker. "They said, 'Take these things with you.' The skins are part of the emblems of royalty, part of the territory. You see this great legacy of culture and wildlife just being allowed to rot, to go to waste. I was trying to prevent that."
Other artifacts from historic buildings are still available in Kathmandu's street markets. "Kathmandu is an open–air museum. There are windows and doors out on the streets going to waste," says Baker. Several of the frames and doors that he kept in his house were among the objects seized by the police.