Curse of the pharaohs uncovers Brotherhood's attempted looting of King Khufu's tomb
 
 
·       The
Egyptian Justice: The Brotherhood is made up of traitors and thieves They
conspired to defame the king
·       The
Supreme Court of Egypt reveals the most dangerous operation to damage the Great
Pyramid, the only remaining monument to the seven wonders of the world
·       The
court confirms: The crime took place in the Brotherhood era, two and a half
months before the June Revolution
·       The
conspirators gave some Germans access to steal pieces from the roof and walls
of the burial chamber
·       King
Khufu has witnessed the civilization of Egypt and the Egyptians for thousands
of years and he had to be protected from any pillage
Day after day we discover what the Brotherhood has
done against the homeland and against history. This is a new crime in which the
Brotherhood tried to abuse and steal a landmark of Egyptian civilization, the
Pyramid of King Khufu, which still fascinates the world with its size and
strength of its construction ... when the Brotherhood the damage at the pyramid
made possible.
The crime was judged by the Supreme Administrative
Court in its historic verdict under the direction of Adel Barik, Vice President
of the State Council, and the membership of Advisor Salah Hilal, Dr. Muhammad
Abdel-Wahab Khafaji, Nabil Atallah and Ahmed Maher, representatives of the
Chairman of the State Council, exposed on Saturday November 28th.
The court declared the exposure of the most
dangerous operation to damage the Great Pyramid of King Khufu, the greatest
king of Egypt, and the only remaining monument to the seven wonders of the
ancient world. The operation took place two and a half months before the
revolution in June 2013 during the reign of the banned organization. 
The court ended the discussion about the
responsibility of senior antique workers in a difficult time Egypt was going
through. The court stated that on April 17, 2013, the Muslim Brotherhood
allowed three German visitors to climb the stairs to the main burial chamber
and to the five chambers above King Khufu's main burial chamber within the
Great Pyramid. 
The action was recorded by one of the three Germans
and published on YouTube. The robbers were able to steal pieces from the
ceiling and walls of King Khufu's main burial chamber, located in the Great
Pyramid, and some pieces from one of the walls of the bird tomb with a sharp
object. The robbers also stole samples of the red ink that was used to write
the name of King Khufu on one of the walls of the fifth room above the king's
main burial chambers, scientifically known as "King Khufu's
Cartridge". 
This caused some scratches that were noticeable to
the naked eye and a break in the wall of the tomb on the left side of the
burial hall which resulted in the breaking of a 13 cm long x 8 cm wide x 1 cm
deep section of stone which damaged the monument.
The court said: The constitution requires the state
to protect and preserve antiquities, to maintain their territories and to
retrieve the pieces that have been stolen, and to organize and supervise their
excavations. Given the value of antiquities in the history and civilization of
the Egyptian state, the constitution prohibits the gifting or exchange of
antiques, as well as their abuse. Trading state antiques is a crime that does
not fall under the statute of limitations.
The court said that the chief inspector for
scientific antiquities had betrayed King Khufu and carried out the orders of
the brotherhood. He left his place of work in the area of the
pyramid antiquities on the day already mentioned and joined the German group of
visitors who visited the bird cemetery within the area on the same day during
that visit.
 The chief
inspector has instructed the security personnel in the area of the
pyramid antiquities to prepare a ladder and provide it for the members of the
German visitor group inside the pyramid to enable them to climb and access the
main burial chamber and the five chambers above of King Khufu in the Great
Pyramid . That happened on April 17th, 2013, exactly from six in the evening to
eight in the evening. This enabled the German group to confiscate samples from
the ceiling and walls of King Khufu's main burial chamber inside the Great
Pyramid, as well as samples of the red ink used to write the name of King Khufu
on one of the walls of the fifth room above the king's main burial chambers.
The court added that, as the chief inspector of
antiquities, he should have been interested in preserving Egyptian antiquities
and preventing their looting or abuse. This confirms the allegation against him
after it had been proven that he was dishonest in the performance of his duties
and that within the pyramids, the most important jewel of Egyptian antiquity.
He was not worthy of it, but a means to abuse the monument of the great Khufu
and to compromise his cartridges and his integrity, for the antiquities enjoy
an inviolability. These should only be examined in a legitimate and scientific
manner. Those who abuse them reap the curse of the law.
Egypt retrieves the stolen items
The court pointed out in its decision that the
Egyptian state, represented by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Ministry
of Antiquities in August 2014, i.e. after the revolution of June 30th and the
issuance of the constitution, due to the value of the antiquities of those
stolen Samples a committee of the Ministries of Foreign Affairs and Antiquities
was formed to open the diplomatic bag received from the Egyptian Embassy in
Berlin, which contains samples stolen from the main burial chamber of the
pyramid of Khufu. 
These were deposited in the basement of the Egyptian
Museum in Tahrir. These events confirm the gravity of the grave mistake they
made against the Great Pyramid, King Khufu, the greatest king of Egypt, and the
only remaining monument to the Seven Wonders of the World.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


