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In early October, The Swan auction house in Tetsworth, Oxfordshire, listed several lots of , including skulls from west Africa and shrunken heads from South America.

They were withdrawn within a couple of days after objections were raised by representatives of the Pitt Rivers museum in Oxford and indigenous .

The Pitt Rivers Museum specializes in archaeology and anthropology, and has been returning similar items from its own collection as part of a wider decolonization process.

The remains withdrawn from the Swan auction—mostly decorated and adorned skulls—appeared to be from colonial-era collections, with estimated prices ranging from £2,000 to £25,000. They had previously been owned by collectors including the late Playboy owner , and , a notorious Canadian antique dealer and self-styled "headhunter."

The remains included examples from the Naga people of India, the Ekoi people of present-day Nigeria and Cameroon, and other groups in the Solomon Islands, Benin, Congo, Nigeria, Amazonia and Papua New Guinea.

While the UK's museums and educational institutions increasingly have about the respectful treatment of , those in private collections do not have any protection. Although it is difficult to legislate how people care for private collections, this case raises the question of whether human remains should still be allowed to be bought and sold at all.

Human remains have long held a fascination for the living. Their collection, display and use has a long, and often dark, history. The Victorians had a penchant for mummies, grinding them up to create new paint colors, tonics for various ailments and more.

There are stories from as late as 1967 of American soldiers removing ears and fingers of those killed during the war in Vietnam as . During and after the Cambodian genocide in the 1970s, some people used the remains of the dead as amulets to ward off dangerous enemies, and as medicines for various illnesses, .

The recent auction, however, shows that colonial practices of collecting, owning and displaying the remains of the dead are very much alive in Britain today.

Collecting the dead

Very few countries fully restrict the sale of human remains, and most legislation remains patchy between jurisdictions. There is also often a lack of clarity over whether rules about such items would fall under laws concerned with the treatment of bodies or those that protect heritage.

In England, Wales and Northern Ireland, the protects human remains. Emerging as a response to the and other similar cases, the act aims to "ensure is used safely and ethically, with proper consent."

Its remit, however, is limited to remains that are less than 100 years old. It also only covers disposal, storage and public display. The sale of human tissue is only prohibited if it is for the purposes of .

The majority of remains already in private collections, which were largely accumulated during the colonial period, are therefore not covered. There are also significant issues with enforcement of ethical standards. showed that the unregulated trade in human remains is thriving on UK social media.

Such a trade suggests the bodies of some human beings are seen as artifacts or artworks. They are treated like objects and not people—added to collections of "curiosities" as though they were any other item in the .

This is not a problem of the past or one just relevant to private collections. Such attitudes—that others are worthy of less respect and care than others—underpin much racism, imperialism and xenophobia today. Such views are linked to ideas of the superiority of one group of people to another. The sale of the dead illuminates this in vivid form.

The Swan auction house listed its lots as part of what it called "The Curious Collector Sale" and advertised these remains alongside lots containing movie props, ethnic art and artifacts, collections of taxidermy and fossils, and paintings and posters. Although some were identified as the ancestors of the relevant ethnic group, there was nothing to distinguish them from the other curios and collectibles of the sale.

Neiphiu Rio, the chief minister of Nagaland in India, some of whose ancestral remains were among those being listed, is to India's foreign minister, "You will agree that the human remains of any deceased person belong to those people and their land. Moreover, the auctioning of human remains deeply hurts the sentiments of the people, is an act of dehumanization and is considered as continued colonial violence upon our people."

Selling colonial collections, and especially human remains, perpetuates the ideas that were integral to British imperialism—that other people can be things to be owned and traded. We'd be horrified if the remains of our own ancestors or of people from our own society were treated in this way. To start dealing with the underlying issues related to this, such sales need to stop.

We approached the Swan auction house for comment on this story but they did not reply.

Provided by The Conversation