• iconNews
  • videos
  • entertainment
  • Home
  • News
    • UK News
    • US News
    • Australia
    • Ireland
    • World News
    • Weird News
    • Viral News
    • Sport
    • Technology
    • Science
    • True Crime
    • Travel
  • Entertainment
    • Celebrity
    • TV & Film
    • Netflix
    • Music
    • Gaming
    • TikTok
  • LAD Originals
    • Say Maaate to a Mate
    • Daily Ladness
    • Lad Files
    • UOKM8?
    • FreeToBe
    • Extinct
    • Citizen Reef
  • Advertise
  • Terms
  • Privacy & Cookies
  • LADbible Group
  • UNILAD
  • SPORTbible
  • GAMINGbible
  • Tyla
  • UNILAD Tech
  • FOODbible
  • License Our Content
  • About Us & Contact
  • Jobs
  • Latest
  • Topics A-Z
  • Authors
Facebook
Instagram
X
Threads
Snapchat
TikTok
YouTube

LAD Entertainment

YouTube

LAD Stories

Submit Your Content
Brit Facing Death Penalty In Iraq Says He Didn’t Know He Was Breaking The Law

Home> News

Published 10:02 16 May 2022 GMT+1

Brit Facing Death Penalty In Iraq Says He Didn’t Know He Was Breaking The Law

Geologist Jim Fitton faces punishment for taking items from a site in Eridu, with his family urging UK government intervention.

Simon Catling

Simon Catling

A retired British geologist facing the death penalty in Iraq for smuggling historic items out of the country has said he didn't realise he was breaking the law.

66-year-old Jim Fitton has been accused by the middle eastern ccountry of taking 12 stones and shards of broken pottery he had found at an archaelogical site in Eridu.

PA/Family Handout

Fitton and German national Volker Waldmann were travelling as part of an organised geology and archaeology tour, when the items were discovered on them as they prepared to fly out of Iraq in March, The Independent reports.

Advert

Appearing in a Baghdad courtroom alongside Volker Waldmann, Fitton told a panel of judges that he hadn't acted with criminal intent.

He admitted that he had 'suspected' the items were ancient fragments, but stated that he 'at the time didn’t know about Iraqi laws', or that taking the shards was not permitted.

To back himself up, he said it was unclear that taking the pieces could've been seen as a criminal offence, given there 'there were fences, no guards or signage'.

As a geologist, Fitton said he often collected fragments of interest as a hobby but without the intention of ever selling them.

However, the head judge of the three-judge panel said the nature of the site he took the fragments from was enough evidence that such an act was prohibited.

Advert

Judge Jaber Abdel Jabi said: “These places, in name and by definition, are ancient sites. One doesn’t have to say it is forbidden."

He also stated that 'size doesn't matter' when the Brit put it to him that some of the fragments were 'no longer than my fingernail'.

PA/Family Handout

Waldmann said the two artefacts that had been found among his own belongings were not his, saying instead they had been given to him to carry by his fellow traveller, Fitton.

The pair now face another hearing on May 22, when it'll be determined if they were planning to profit from the items.

Advert

The highest punishment they could face would be the death penalty – although legal experts have stressed that this would be unlikely.

Fitton’s lawyers are planning to submit more evidence, including some from government officials present at the archaeological site where the fragments were taken.

Fitton's children Joshua and Leila, and Lelia’s husband Sam Tasker, have urged the UK government to intervene, with a petition calling on the UK government to act.

It read: “Whilst on the tour, our father visited historical sites around Iraq, where his tour group found fragments of stones and shards of broken pottery in piles on the ground.

"Tour members were told that this would not be an issue, as the broken shards had no economic or historical value.”

Advert

MPs did end up discussing his case in the House of Commons last week, with Foreign Minister James Cleverly saying that the British ambassador in Iraq had raised the case four times with the country’s authorities.

Featured Image Credit: Family Handout/PA

Topics: Crime, UK News

Simon Catling
Simon Catling

Advert

Advert

Advert

Choose your content:

4 mins ago
23 mins ago
2 hours ago
  • Youtube/Justin Dorff
    4 mins ago

    Day-by-day breakdown of what happens to your body when you stop eating for a week after man shared impact it had on him

    Spoiler alert, things can get very bad

    News
  • Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg via Getty Images
    23 mins ago

    Every time Melania Trump has sparked 'body double' conspiracy as act when touching down in UK reignites theory

    The theory has run rampant again after the First Lady of the US touched down in England on Tuesday (September 16)

    News
  • Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images
    2 hours ago

    People point out major thing missing from Donald Trump's arrival to UK and slam it as an 'insult'

    Some fans have also questioned why a prominent UK figure wasn't at the airport to greet the US president

    News
  • AARON CHOWN/POOL/AFP via Getty Images
    2 hours ago

    Donald Trump breaks major royal etiquette in first moments of meeting with King Charles

    It's not the first time Trump's made a hash of it

    News
  • Mum of Brit student jailed in Dubai sets up new fundraiser after revealing daughter's 'very stupid mistake'
  • How Utah carries out capital punishment as Trump calls for death penalty for Charlie Kirk killer
  • Brit facing 60 years for ‘smuggling cocaine from Mexico’ allegedly caught trying to escape US
  • Boyfriend of Ukrainian refugee who was stabbed to death on train blasts judge for letting suspect free