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The
Mystery of the Persian Mummy
First shown: BBC
Two 9.00pm Thursday 20 September 2001




NARRATOR (BERNARD HILL): Last year in this wild
border region of Pakistan police stumble across one of the most
dramatic archaeological finds in recent memory - a magnificent mummy
adorned in gold and believed to be 2,500 years old - but that was
only the beginning of the story. In the months that followed the
mummy began to reveal a terrible secret, a secret so horrific that
it was to turn this archaeological triumph into a modern day murder
hunt. This extraordinary story began with a tip-off to the Pakistan
police. On October 19th last year officers raided a house in
Karachi. They arrested an Iranian with a video showing an ancient
mummy in a carved wooden box that he was trying to sell for a
fortune on the black market. Under interrogation Ali Aqbar claimed
that the mummy had been discovered when an earthquake disturbed an
archaeological site in the desert.
DET. SUPT. FAROOQ AWAN (Karachi Police): Hadji Ali Aqbar have a
story. They say that during the earthquake from a damaged house in
the mountain this wooden box was recovered.
NARRATOR: Detective Superintendent Farooq followed the trail of the
wooden box here to Quetta near the Afghani and Iranian borders. He
was taken to a house in the back streets of town. This is where he
found the mummy. The house belongs to a local chief, Sardar Wali
Reki.
(ACTUALITY CHAT)
NARRATOR: Reki is a camel breeder and head of the 160,000-strong
Reki tribe. He too was hoping to increase his fortune from the sale
of the mummy on the international antiquities black market.
INTERVIEWER: What value have you placed on this mummy?
SARDAR WALI REKI (WITH ENGLISH TRANSLATION): There were many
valuations on the open market. The highest was one billion dollars.
NARRATOR: But Reki never made his fortune. The mummy was seized by
the police as a national treasure and taken to the Archaeology
Museum in Karachi.
DR ASMA IBRAHIM (Curator, National Museum of Pakistan): It was
October 19th. I remember the date exactly. I received a call from
the police. They said that they want to show me something, so I went
there, so there it was.
NARRATOR: Dr. Asma Ibrahim was curator of the National Museum when
the mummy arrived. As events unfolded, they were recorded on her
video camera.
ASMA IBRAHIM: The police thought that it's a very big discovery so
they should tell everyone. They were really happy and like jumping
up and down and they said, "Oh! we've got a mummy in
Pakistan," and were really proud of it and this is the event of
the century.
NARRATOR: The mummy was lying inside this ornately carved wooden
box.
ASMA IBRAHIM: The box was open already and the mummy was covered
with the help of this stone coffin. I thought in the beginning that
this could be alabaster.
NARRATOR: Then they began lifting off the broken stone coffin one
piece at a time.
ASMA IBRAHIM: They started picking up from the foot side, this
piece, and then this one and then last from the head side.
NARRATOR: When the last piece of stone was lifted up she could
hardly believe her eyes.
ASMA IBRAHIM: I was really happy and excited. Actually I was too
excited. I mean I couldn't concentrate on one thing - the cyprus
tree. The chest plate I liked the most. This was something very new
which I never saw before because we have never come across such
script in Pakistan. Of course the crown and the mask, the whole
mummy impressed me a lot. It was a beautiful piece of art.
NARRATOR: The mummy was tiny. Only 4 feet, 7 inches long [1.4 metres]
and covered in a resin impregnated cloth which had formed a hard
protective shell. The same mysterious script from the wooden box and
stone coffin was repeated on a gold chest plate laid on top of the
mummy's crossed arms. For a young archaeologist like Asma Ibrahim
the mummy represented the opportunity of a lifetime.
ASMA IBRAHIM: I always wanted to work on the mummies you know I was
really fascinated to work on the mummy, so it was like a dream come
true for me.
NARRATOR: No one knew who the body in the mummy could be or where it
came from because no one had ever seen a mummy in Pakistan before.
This astonishing discovery hit the world's headlines. Ahmed Hasan
Dani, Pakistan's most eminent archaeologist, gave his opinion at a
press conference.
PROF. AHMED HASAN DANI: Normally in Pakistan we do not have mummies
at all. They must have come from outside. People say it probably may
have come from Iran to Pakistan, but Iran also we do not have
mummies at all. Mummies are known only from Egypt.
NARRATOR: Professor Dani believed that the mummy was, at some time,
brought across the border into Pakistan from neighbouring Iran, but
that it must have started its journey long ago in Egypt. In his view
it couldn't have come from anywhere else because it had the telling
signs of ritual mummification that were unique to the ancient
Egyptians. For 3,000 years the Egyptians believed that the souls of
the dead could be saved only if they were reunited with their bodies,
but that meant that bodies must be preserved for eternity, so the
Egyptians invented a unique way of doing this. Specially trained
morticians carefully removed the internal organs - the lungs,
kidneys, liver - everything except the heart which, as the
receptacle for the soul, was left inside the body. Then they
extracted all moisture from the body by stuffing and covering it
with a natural drying agent called natron. It would take 40 days to
dry the body out. Then it was meticulously wrapped in linen cloth
and then cased in wood, with an effigy of the person carved on the
outside. Then the coffin was placed in a sarcophagus. This is how
the Egyptians ensured that the body was ready for the afterlife. It
seemed that the Pakistan mummy had been made with the same purpose
in mind. It was bound in cloth and there was a stone coffin enclosed
in a wooden sarcophagus, but there were distinctive differences too.
Adornments never seen on an Egyptian mummy. In particular the
inscriptions and the cuneiform script of ancient Iran, the centre of
the Persian empire. For Professor Dani this conflicting evidence was
utterly mystifying.
AHMED HASAN DANI: Mummies were not used by the Iranians. Cuneiform
writing was not used by the Egyptians. Mummy was used by Egyptians
and so how could cuneiform writing be on this mummy is difficult to
say.
NARRATOR: The obvious conclusion was that this must be a Persian,
mummified in the Egyptian way. If that were true and the Persians
had copied the mummification techniques of the Egyptians and applied
them to their own nobility then this discovery was quite unique and
the mummy almost priceless.
DR BOB BRIER (Egyptologist, Long Island University): It would be one
of the most important in the world and there would be all kinds of
scholarly papers written about it. For example, did the Egyptians
send embalmers to Persia to mummify this thing? It would be a very
important mummy.
DR OSCAR WHITE MUSCARELLA (Metropolitan Museum of Art): I've come
across figures for this: $50m, $11m, £35m spread all over. Where
those figures came from I don't know, but there's no doubt that this
would have brought millions of dollars.
NARRATOR: In the midst of all the excitement Asma Ibrahim retained a
professional scepticism. This rewriting of history would have to
wait until she had investigated the mummy properly and established
the identity of the person wrapped up in such a dignified and
extravagant way. She believed the answer must lie in the cuneiform
inscriptions, the simple written language of ancient Persia. She
taught herself the cuneiform script from a grammar book. Then she
translated the inscription that was copied on the stone coffin and
the centre of the wooden box.
ASMA IBRAHIM: Slowly, slowly I could make out, I could, I mean like
the words were making sense to me like adama - I am; ducta -
daughter; sayarasa - Xerxes. I am daughter of Xerxes. The name of
the king was there and as I was reading it I was getting more and
more excited.
NARRATOR: The full inscription read: I am the daughter of the great
King Xerxes. Mazereka protect me. I am Rhodugune, I am. So this
wasn't an ordinary mummy. She appeared to be a royal Persian
princess. Very little is known about Princess Rhodugune. No one even
knows how old she was when she died, or what she died of. In fact no
remains of any member of the Persian Royal Family had ever been
found before. The discovery seemed incredible, yet in the weeks that
followed more evidence was found to support the idea that this was
Princess Rhodugune, evidence to link the mummy to the ancient
Persian Royal Court. This is Persepolis where Princess Rhodugune
lived 2,500 years ago. This extravagant city was built by her
grandfather Darius and her father, the great Persian king Xerxes.
Xerxes ruled over a huge empire that stretched from the
Mediterranean in the west to Indian in the east and notably to Egypt
in the south. In Persepolis hundreds of stonemasons, some of them
Egyptian, were employed to carve out images on the royal palaces.
Many of these images were familiar icons of Persian art.
DR ST JOHN SIMPSON (The British Museum): These are casts of
sculptures from Persepolis in southern Iran, particularly from
palaces of Xerxes and the later Persian kings. You can see examples
of these rosette borders. Rosettes are used throughout the palace
schemes at Persepolis. They frame all of the scenes on the
staircases of the Apandana.
ASMA IBRAHIM: Of course this rosette which is very popular on
Persian monuments though it was a big one but very familiar and then
on the head side you can see this was very interesting for me. The
head side of the coffin. It had seven cyprus trees. The same seven
cyprus trees were showing on the crown of the mummy. This was the
symbol of the city of Hamadan which was there at the time of the
Xerxes and he used to celebrate all his functions in everything in
Hamadan, so she must be very important because somebody's depicting
the symbol of the city on her head and on the head side of the
coffin.
NARRATOR: But the most significant icon in Persopolis and on the
mummy's wooden box was the god Ahuramazda, chief deity of
Rhodugune's Zoroasterian religion.
ST JOHN SIMPSON: These two sections of cast belong to a huge scene
decorating one side of the south-east doorway into the so-called
Hall of 100 Columns, built by Xerxes on the citadel at Persepolis.
It's a scene that is repeated on many of the doorways of the palaces
at Persepolis.
NARRATOR: The symbols on the mummy's body and coffin were the
symbols of the Persian Royal Court. Even the gold mask matched this
one in the Persian Gallery of the British Museum, but for Asma
Ibrahim there was still one unresolved issue. As far as she knew,
there was no proof that the Persians had mummified their dead. The
evidence had disappeared. All the royal tombs in Persepolis were
raided centuries ago and the bodies of the Persian Royal Family were
never recovered. Then Asma Ibrahim made her next discovery. Among a
collection of Persian history in Karachi's Zoroastrian community
library she found a book by the Greek historian Herodotus. While
travelling from Greece to Persepolis at the time of Xerxes,
Herodotus had visited the royal tombs and described in detail how
the Persians had preserved the bodies of their Royal Family.
ASMA IBRAHIM: The tomb itself had a doorway so narrow that even a
man of moderate height would not enter without some difficulty.
Within this stone edifice of the golden sarcophagus in which the
body of Cyrus was deposited and near the sarcophagus was a couch
resting on the body…
NARRATOR: Herodotus went on to describe how the ancient Persians had
embalmed their royal dead with wax and resin and, like the Egyptians,
placed them in sarcophagi. Perhaps Rhodugune had been embalmed and
placed here, her tomb raided, like all the others. Then proof was
found that at least one Persian had been mummified in the Egyptian
way. During recent excavations in Egypt a tomb carving was found
which showed a Persian in circumstances never seen before. His name
spelled out in Egyptian hieroglyphs is Jedherbase. He is portrayed
stretched out on an Egyptian mortuary slab and is being tended by
Egyptian deities, Anubis and Isis. Sitting nearby is his father in
distinctive Persian clothes. Jedherbase was a Persian administrator
in Egypt at the time of Xerxes. It is clear that this Persian man
living in ancient Egypt is being mummified and if a Persian civil
servant was mummified, why not a Persian Princess? Back in Karachi,
Asma Ibrahim had begun the task of verifying this remarkable mummy
with experts around the world. Samples of the reed mat that the
mummy lay on were sent off to Germany for carbon dating and because
she'd noticed inconsistencies in the cuneiform script, she e-mailed
photos to one of the world's leading experts in London.
PROF NICHOLAS SIMS-WILLIAMS (University of London): There are some
mistakes which could easily have been made in the Achaemenian period
when this script was in use because of course the stonemasons or the
goldsmiths who carved the inscriptions themselves would have been
illiterate, they would have been simply copying. If one looks at the
middle sign on this second line here that's the letter gu in the
name Rhodogune, but at the top it's got a single wedge where it
should have had two wedges side by side. It's quite a possible
mistake for a stonemason to make. The text is framed within a
rectangle and there are ruled lines between the separate lines of
writing. That's very authentic and also the actual shape of the
individual wedges is very neatly done so that everything about that
looks very good. If you compare it with well-established old Persian
texts written on a stone tablet you can see that the actual shape of
the wedges is exactly right and the way that the text is within a
ruled border and with rules lines between is exactly correct.
NARRATOR: But it wasn't just the writings and adornments surrounding
the mummy that were intriguing. Rhodugune as a person was a complete
enigma. No one knew how, when and why she'd died. It became
important to see what the body looked like inside the outer casing
and there was only one way to do this without destroying the mummy.
She had to be taken to hospital.
(ACTUALITY CHAT)
NARRATOR: For the first time they could see the body inside the
mummy. So very little is written in the history books about
Rhodugune and now finally they believed there was a chance to learn
something about her. For them the X-rays would tell whether
Rhodugune was a child or an adult when she died.
DR JEFFREY REES (Aga Khan University Hospital, Karachi): This is the
X-ray of a 16-year-old patient. At that time of age the pelvis is
still growing and we can tell that because here we have an example
of the growing end of the pelvic bone. You can see this white sliver
of material which is sitting on top of this large bulk of bone here.
This is referred to as an epiphysus. At the age of 21 that epiphysus
reliably closes, therefore somebody who is younger than 21 will have
an epiphysus. Here we have an X-ray of the mummy itself and we think
that the epiphysus is closed and therefore this person at the time
of death would be older than 21-25 years of age.
NARRATOR: Although only 4 feet 7inches, this was the body of a
mature adult, but the X-rays couldn't penetrate cleanly through the
gold mask and chest plates. To tell if she really had been mummified
in the Egyptian way, with the internal organs removed, the mummy had
to be put through a CT scan. The mummy was passed from head to toe
through the scanner. For the first time they could see a clear
cross-section of view through the inside of the body.
JEFFREY REES: Here we are in the thorax of the mummy and the first
thing that you see is that there are no internal organs. Normally
one would see the heart and the lungs on both sides. Where the lungs
should be you can see this very high density material which we think
is the mummification material which is lying on both sides of the
vertebral body here.
NARRATOR: As he scrolled through images of the abdominal cavity,
Rees discovered how the internal organs had been removed.
JEFFREY REES: They can see the skin of the front of the abdomen and
similarly on this side here with a large aperture or hollow in
between them. This is what we think is the incision in order to
remove the internal organs, with a bandage falling down into it.
NARRATOR: The scan established that this was a ritual mummification.
All the internal organs had been removed and the hands were crossed
over the chest, in Egyptian mummies a distinguishing symbol of
royalty.
ASMA IBRAHIM: When we saw no articles, nothing and she was, I mean
perfectly mummified just like a mummy you know you could see she was
stuffed with some sort of material in her stomach and she, there was
no brain and the same gel-like material was stuffed in her brain as
well, so we all knew that she is a mummy.
NARRATOR: If the mummified body of Princess Rhodugune really had
been found then the history books would have to be rewritten. It
meant that the Egyptians may not just have supplied stonemasons and
goldsmiths to the Royal Court of Xerxes. Their mummifiers may have
come here too. It meant that the Persian kings, queens and
princesses may have been ritually mummified just like the Egyptians.
This would have been a truly dramatic revelation. But instead of
being a revelation, the whole story surrounding the mummy was about
to unravel in a totally unexpected and horrifying way, for the mummy
was eventually to reveal a terrible secret. Asma Ibrahim and her
team had continued their investigation, but the more they looked the
more they saw things that puzzled them about the way Rhodugune had
been mummified. They wanted a second opinion, from a specialist in
Egyptian mummification. Bob Brier has spent years researching how
the ancient Egyptians mummified their dead by extracting the
internal organs precisely and with the minimum amount of damage to
the body.
BOB BRIER: The Egyptians were professionals in embalming so they had
special tools and these were not guys who were just doing it. They
had their own little tricks. The hardest part was undoubtedly
removing the brain. It involved two separate tools. Now this is the
first one. They would take this and put it through the nose into the
cranium to get access to the brain. Then, once they've got the nasal
passage opened up into the cranium, they take something like this
and they put it inside the nose into the brain and they rotate it
like a whisk and what they're doing is they're breaking down the
brain so it liquefies and will run out through the nose.
NARRATOR: To get direct access to the brain through the nose the
Egyptians mummifers had first to break carefully through solid bone.
BOB BRIER: I can show you an X-Ray, actually it's a CAT scan, that
will illustrate how good the Egyptians were. They were very precise.
This is the cranium here. The nose would be over here and the
ethmoid bone, which is what they had to break through to get into
the cranium, has been taken out. It's missing.
NARRATOR: This is the same perspective of the Pakistan mummy's head.
The ethmoid bone remains unbroken. The brain must have been taken
out another way.
BOB BRIER: You can see this is the area where they came in and broke
through the palate coming under the chin all the way up breaking
quite a few bones on the way through to get to the brain. It was a
kind of non-surgical procedure, almost a brutalising of the mummy,
so it's really quite different. Once the brain was removed, they
would remove the internal organs. Now this was a crucial part
because the internal organs are very moist and that's where bacteria
act and that's where you'll get putrefaction where the body will
start to decay, so you have to take out the internal organs quickly.
Now to do that they made an incision in the abdomen. It's about
three inches maybe right over here, real small incision. The
Pakistan mummy looks quite different. What you've got here is your
abdominal incision first of all, this is the abdominal incision here.
It's larger, it's in a different place, it's running from the
sternum about eight inches long which is quite different from the
small Egyptian incision. In general the Pakistan mummy is less
skilfully done.
NARRATOR: There was one other, and conclusive, difference. Something
that is found in a mummified Egyptian was missing.
BOB BRIER: The only thing inside the body was the heart because they
believed that you thought with your heart. They thought that the
heart was the seat of intelligence. Now the heart had to stay in the
body because when you got to the next world you'd have to be able to
think and you'd have to be able to speak to say the magical spells
that was going to reassemble your body.
NARRATOR: In the Pakistan mummy there was no heart. There was
something not quite right about this mummy. Clearly it hadn't been
made by ancient Egyptians and yet no other culture was known to
preserve bodies in this way, so who had mummified this mysterious
Princess? After weeks of detective work a disturbing truth began to
emerge. The first shock came when Asma Ibrahim received
Sims-Williams' final report on the cuneiform inscriptions. As well
as the common errors expected of Ancient Persian artisans, there was
another that he had never seen before. There was an error in the
inscription 'I am the daughter of the great King'.
NICHOLAS SIMS-WILLIAMS: All Persian is an inflected language that
has endings to show how the words relate to one another and the
phrase 'of the great King Xerxes' all the words in that phrase ought
to have had the so-called genitive ending to show the meaning of.
NARRATOR: This is how the Persian word for King Shiathiya is
inscribed in cuneiform on the mummy's gold chest plate, but
Sims-Williams saw that some symbols were missing.
NICHOLAS SIMS-WILLIAMS: The word for King, of the King, should have
three extra letters at the end so it should have this, so that would
be Shiathiyahya instead of Shiathiya. These three letters - h, y, a
- they've just left out and so he just wrote 'I am daughter Xerxes
great King' with none of the correct endings to show how those words
fit together.
NARRATOR: But Sims-Williams had also discovered another error that
not even the most ham-fisted of Xerxes stonemasons could ever have
made. Rhodugune is a later Greek translation of the name Wardegauna,
the original Persian name for Xerxes' daughter. By inscribing the
cuneiform text for Rhodugune and not Wardegauna the carver had used
the spelling from a later era.
NICHOLAS SIMS-WILLIAMS: That's really a fatal error because there's
no way that an old Persian king would have had the name of his
daughter inscribed in a Greek form.
NARRATOR: Sims-Williams was convinced that these inscriptions could
not possibly be the work of the master stonemasons of the Persian
Court. They must have been made later, after the Greeks had
conquered Persia, and long after Rhodugune had died. These
inscriptions were a fake. And there was more bad news. By now Asma
Ibrahim had cleaned the wooden box and re-examined the carvings
under a magnifying glass. Hidden away in the tiniest crevices tight
up against the carved emblems of the rosette and the god Ahuramazda
she made a startling discovery.
ASMA IBRAHIM: The most shocking thing which I came to see where the
pencil marks which were so well marked on the coffin and they worked
along the sides of the pencil marks. They were the chasings from
somewhere. Most probably it was traced from a monument. That's why
the rosette was in such a big size and the same thing for the
Ahuramazda.
NARRATOR: Lead pencils were only invented 200 years ago, so this was
clearly not the work of ancient artisans and then the carbon dating
results confirmed that the mat the mummy lay on was made in the last
50 years. There was only one conclusion: everything surrounding the
mummy was a fake. It had all been concocted in modern times to fool
the art world and make money.
ASMA IBRAHIM: I thought that oh my God, what is this going on? I was
disappointed. I didn't want to admit that she is a fake. Maybe I was
emotionally attached to her.
NARRATOR: So the inscriptions and adornments on this magnificent
mummy were modern forgeries. This was not Princess Rhodugune but
there was a real body wrapped up inside. Asma Ibrahim thought that
the forgers had found a genuine ancient mummy and dressed it up as a
princess to increase its value, but the truly appalling nature of
this fraud only began to emerge when the CT scans of the mummy were
scrutinised in the minutest detail. The radiologists had spotted
something curious about the tiniest bone in the body buried inside
the inner ear.
JEFFREY REES: What we're looking at here is the bones of the ear.
This is the external to the skull, so the sound enters the ear in
this direction. In the middle ear which is this hourglass shape
structure here, there are small bones called ossicles. Here we can
see two of those ossicles held together by very delicate tendons and
ligaments.
NARRATOR: In an ancient corpse it would be virtually impossible for
these delicate tendons and ligaments to remain intact, even if it
were mummified, and yet here they were perfectly intact. The
disturbing conclusions was that this body could not be ancient. This
woman must have died recently and then been mummified. It meant that
someone with a knowledge of anatomy and an understanding of
mummification techniques had taken a newly dead body and removed the
internal organs and they had covered the body with chemicals and
left it for a month to dry out. It seemed incredible, but someone
had performed this gruesome ritual in the last few years and they
had done it for profit, and that was just the beginning. This whole
fraud was so complex and elaborate that it would have needed a whole
team to carry it out. There would have been a goldsmith to beat out
the mask and chest plate; a cabinet maker to create the carve the
wooden box; and a stonemason to inscribe the stone coffin; and then
there was the person who had learned the cuneiform text.
ASMA IBRAHIM: One person did the cuneiform. He was the expert of
cuneiform writing, or maybe he knew it, maybe not an expert because
there are mistakes there, so he knew cuneiform and one person who
carved them because if I, even if I know cuneiform I'm not able to
carve it somewhere you see, I'm not able to write it.
NICHOLAS SIMS-WILLIAMS: they could have used the standard edition of
Old Persian Inscriptions by Roland Kent which contains a
grammar, a word list, a table of all the signs. It contains
everything in fact that you would need in order to create an
inscription of this kind. It's a very standard work. This edition
was published in 1953. There must be many copies in Iran.
NARRATOR: And behind the fraud there was the mastermind, an
archaeologist perhaps, certainly a man with an expert knowledge of
Persian and Egyptian history.
ASMA IBRAHIM: This person is a well read person, or must be a
scholar.
NARRATOR: So who were these criminals and where did they come from?
The first clue that would give a hint of the hoaxers' whereabouts
was found in New Jersey. Last year, unknown to the Pakistan
authorities, an Iranian called Amanollah Riggi, apparently an
innocent middle man, sent off four Polaroid photos of the mummy.
They arrived in New York at the Metropolitan Museum addressed to its
expert on Near Eastern art. A few days later he got a phone call.
OSCAR WHITE MUSCARELLA: Said he had been recommended to me by a
professor as an expert on Iranian and Achaemenian art and he said
that he had access to an extraordinary discovery, a major mummy that
had been found in Iran and he had a video of this and it was
extraordinary, would I be interested?
NARRATOR: the Iranian middle man had approached one of the world's
authorities in Persian art, but Muscarella was also the world's
leading expert in spotting fake Persian art. He recognised in the
mummy similar faults he'd seen in other forgeries from the same
region. In this case they'd taken the real ancient figure of the God
Ahuramazda carved out of rock and copied it onto the mummy's wooden
box, but without some essential details.
OSCAR WHITE MUSCARELLA: He made two little open loops totally
misunderstanding and therefore mis-representing exactly what was
done. The hands are a lump, the beard is just jutting down. This
could not have been by an ancient artist.
NARRATOR: Not only was it clear to Muscarella that this was a
forgery, but he was sure that it had come from one of the major art
faking centres in the world - Iran.
OSCAR WHITE MUSCARELLA: There's no doubt in my mind that there are
more forgeries with the whole, in the course of Iranian art than
from any other area of the ancient Near East and again these are
people I think locally working and I have no doubt this was made in
Iran.
NARRATOR: So the whole forgery was most likely to have been done in
Iran, but the most disturbing question was: who was the woman inside
the mummy, and where did she come from? For whoever masterminded
this fake had first to find someone to mummify.
ASMA IBRAHIM: They must have brought the body from somewhere so I
mean a body they can buy from anyone, I mean they are very, nowadays
we find a lot of grave for looters, so they could buy a body. I mean
they first plan everything, they collected all these people, or they
hired them and then they went for a body and they quickly did the
mummification.
NARRATOR: The timing was critical. In hot countries where a body can
quickly decompose it would have to have been mummified within 24
hours, so with cold-blooded calculation the team of fakers had to
prepare everything for the operation first: the lab, half a ton of
drying chemicals, the resins, the bandages - these would all have to
have been gathered and stored until they could take delivery of a
body, but now new evidence began to emerge, evidence that showed
that in their haste to secure a fresh body at exactly the right
moment for mummification the forgers may have committed another, and
more terrible, crime: they may have committed murder. Scanning
through the body from head to toe, Jeffrey Rees had noticed that the
spine was out of alignment.
JEFFREY REES: Here is a normal vertebrae. As we proceed towards the
patient's feet you notice that these vertebrae are in a nice
straight line and suddenly they're beginning to move forwards,
abnormally forwards and there's significant disruption and then
sometimes it looks like as if there's actually two vertebrae
suggesting to us that there has been a significant distortion of the
normal anatomy.
NARRATOR: The body in the mummy had received a violent blow to the
lower spine. Her back was broken.
JEFFREY REES: it appears to be due to a blunt injury rather than a
sharp injury. the vertebrae are also rotating. It suggests that the
force would be from the patient's back and given that they're moving
to the left then the force would be coming from the right.
NARRATOR: For the police the broken vertebrae had now raised the
spectre of murder, but in order to prove it they had to look closely
at the body itself. They needed an autopsy. the person they turned
to was Professor Chris Milroy, one of the world's leading forensic
pathologists. His job is to investigate the cause of death. He was
invited to Karachi by the Pakistan authorities to do an autopsy on
the body in the mummy.
PROF CHRIS MILROY (University of Sheffield): The evidence is very
suspicious that this is a modern fraud and therefore the question is
who is this person?
MAN: Was she murdered or something?
CHRIS MILROY: Well we have no proof at the moment of someone being
killed. We don't know yet how this person came by their death.
NARRATOR: To find conclusive evidence for the police inquiry they
would have to cut through the thick, hard surface layer of resin
impregnated bandages, without contravening Muslim customs or
damaging the fragile body inside. For Asma Ibrahim the destruction
of the mummy's casing was immaterial. Her concern now lay only with
pursuing justice for the victim. It took three hours to cut through
the tough casing surrounding the body.
(ACTUALITY CHAT)
NARRATOR: When the back of the shell was removed the first thing
they saw was a tuft of blond hair sticking through the bandages.
(ACTUALITY CHAT)
NARRATOR: Now they could see the body of the victim. The details of
how this woman had been mummified became clear. Inside the mummy's
shell where it could not possibly be seen, each of her limbs, each
of her fingers had been bound again separately, as the Egyptians had
done.
ASMA IBRAHIM: There is some chemical…
NARRATOR: When the bandages were removed they could see her hair was
grey. Only the tips were blond.
ASMA IBRAHIM: Some chemical…
CHRIS MILROY: Well I suspect that that's what it is. She's got this
blond hair which is (TALKING TOGETHER)
ASMA IBRAHIM: They are black here as well Chris.
CHRIS MILROY: Yes, with much darker hair and therefore that's why I
think that the likelihood is that this hair has been modified by…
ASMA IBRAHIM: Some chemicals.
CHRIS MILROY: …some chemicals. It's essentially a bleaching
process.
NARRATOR: With the outer casing removed they could see how the
fakers had embalmed this woman. They had packed her body with drying
chemicals - bicarbonate of soda and sodium chloride, common table
salt and there was physical evidence of the terrible injuries that
this woman had received - her broken spine.
CHRIS MILROY: There is a significant change in the orientation of
the vertebrae so they're not going straight down as they should do.
They become curved.
NARRATOR: then samples of bone and tissue were sent for carbon
dating. The results show that this woman died in 1996. With the
bandages and gold mask removed it was finally possible to get a
clear scan of the victim's head and here suddenly there was a new
revelation. These are the vertebrae of the neck rising from the body
into the head. They should continue in a straight line, but they
don't. At this point they veer off at a right angle. Her spinal
column had been snapped in two. This was the cause of death. This
broken neck could have been caused either deliberately or in a
genuine accident after which this woman was buried and later dug up
by the criminals. It was impossible to prove from the autopsy which
of these had happened.
CHRIS MILROY: This could have been murder, but I think that the most
likely explanation of how someone came by this body are that they
dug up a recent, a freshly dead body. That is in my opinion the most
likely. It is a crime, whether or not it was a murder, it's immoral,
it's unethical and it is illegal.
NARRATOR: The evidence of a broken neck was enough to prompt the
police to launch a murder enquiry. They have now decided to
re-interrogate key witnesses in Quetta, the middle men who had tried
to sell the mummy believing it to be genuine. The police hope this
information will eventually lead them to the people responsible for
this crime.
FAROOQ AWAN: It is confirmed that this is a murder case. We will
register the case against Ali Aqbar, against Sardar Wali Reki. They
will be arrested in this case, they will be re-interrogated,
interrogated regarding the murder.
NARRATOR: But the police now have a double task. They have to find
the murderer and they have to identify the victim. This is the face
of the woman inside the mummy, the victim, the so-called Persian
Princess. This image was generated by computer from her exact skull
measurements and the known facial characteristics of women from the
border region of Pakistan and Iran, her most likely home. It was
from a place like this that she must have been taken and shockingly,
since the autopsy, two more so-called Persian mummies have been
offered for sale on the international art market for $6m. They too
appear to have been ritually adorned and mummified in the same way.
It is beginning to look like a production line and it raises the
chilling possibility that hidden away in this wild border land is a
mummy factory and the prospect of more victims.
ASMA IBRAHIM: Put the bandage over this. It's really shocking and is
a cruel act of humanity to do this thing to some human being. I feel
upset about it because they have damaged the sanctity of somebody in
such a disrespectful way.
NARRATOR: Now all Asma Ibrahim can do is to give this woman the
decent Muslim burial that she deserves, but she knows that this may
not be the last victim in this extraordinary story.
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