The Minister of Culture, Information and Tourism visits the British Museum and discusses the improvement of cooperation to protect the Sudanese heritage

As part of the efforts of the Ministry of Culture, Information and Tourism to improve international partnerships and develop cooperation with international institutions concerning heritage protection
The Minister of Culture, Information and Tourism went to Mr. Khaled Al -esir, the British Museum of the British capital, London
It is a continuation of the understanding affected during his visit to Great Britain last January.
Where emotion inspected a group of Sudanese antiques presented by Ms. Joli Anderson, secretary of the Sudanese department of the museum and president of the Archaeological Sudanese Research Association, and in the presence of Mr. Michael Malinson and Mrs. Helen Malinson of the Royal Royal Archric Ossama Ibrahim, second secretary and head of the cultural file at the Sudanese embassy.
The visit included a long meeting which included Ms. Julie Anderson, Mr. Michael Malinson and Ms. Helen Malinson, during which the two parties discussed the prospects for joint cooperation in the field of preservation of Sudanese cultural heritage, and the efforts to restore the sudden monuments caught, in addition to supporting the Sudanese maintenance programs which were severely damaged as a result of the result Sudanese terror of museum maintenance programs that have been seriously damaged as the result of terror.
During the meeting, the two parties agreed to launch a new version of the “Tourism Time” project in the city of Khartoum, in the ethnographic museum, in the pursuit of successes that the project previously carried out in the cities of Kassala and Al-Brakel under the supervision of the Sudanese Ministry of Culture, Information and Tourism, where its last achievement was recently the opening of the tourist village in Kasassal.
It has also been agreed to implement maintenance work for a number of prominent archaeological monuments in the city of Suakin, including the Sayyid Taj al -ir mosque, the police station, Zawiya Musa, and the initial school, which contributes to the preservation of Sudanese cultural heritage and its protection for future generations. In addition, it was agreed to prepare a detailed list of looted artefacts for Sudanese museums.
The British Museum and the Royal Architect and their partners are those who have contributed to the rehabilitation of more than 12 Sudanese museums in recent years.




