Qatar and Omani Border Absent in Louvre Abu Dhabi Map
By Elsie Dusting
Tensions between the UAE and Qatar worsened last year when Saudi Arabia, the Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt severed diplomatic ties with Qatar. Omani activists accused the Louvre Abu Dhabi of deliberately misrepresenting the Gulf region’s geography, and are interpreting the map’s display as a direct attack on Qatar amid ongoing hostilities.
The Louvre Abu Dhabi opened last November, a decade after France and the UAE signed a USD 10 billion, 30-year intergovernmental contract to create the museum. It has been billed as “the first universal museum in the Arab world,” meant to celebrate cultural exchange and tolerance.
Anwar Gargash, the Emirati minister of state for foreign affairs, suggests that reports of the museum’s use of an incorrect map have been “exaggerated” and that “culture remains more significant than those small issues.” On Monday, January 22, the Louvre Abu Dhabi released a statement to indicate “the inaccuracy was an oversight,” and replaced the map on the same day.
Elsie Dusting is an editorial intern at ArtAsiaPacific.
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