As France passes law on returning loot, should China pop the champagne?
France has passed a new law aimed at simplifying the return of looted cultural artifacts. The legislation, which passed with unanimous support in the National Assembly, was invoked by Deputy Jeremie Patrier-Leitus, who quoted 19th-century writer Victor Hugo.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedFrance has passed a new law aimed at simplifying the return of looted cultural artifacts. The legislation, which passed with unanimous support in the National Assembly, was invoked by Deputy Jeremie Patrier-Leitus, who quoted 19th-century writer Victor Hugo. Hugo had previously condemned France and Britain for their actions during the 1860 attack on Beijing's Old Summer Palace, stating that France had "pocketed half" of the treasures and expressing hope for their eventual return to China. The passage of this law fulfills Hugo's long-held wish, marking a significant step in France's efforts to repatriate looted cultural heritage.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedVictor Hugo hoped France would return looted booty to China.
The French empire displayed looted artifacts from the Summer Palace with 'proprietorial naivety'.
Victor Hugo condemned France and Britain for looting the Old Summer Palace in 1861.
A French National Assembly Deputy invoked Victor Hugo's words during a vote on returning looted artifacts.
France passed a law to streamline the return of looted cultural artifacts.