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Date: | Sun, 21 Aug 2005 10:49:12 -0400 |
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It might help to appeal to your congressional folks, to the American
cultural attache in Kenya, and to the Kenyan cultural attache in
Washington.
As chair of a scholarly prize committee for American Assoc of History
of Medicine, I ran into a similar problem last year with
UPS/Brazilian customs. We give the winner a facsimile page from a
medieval manuscript--worth about $200. We ended paying close to that
much (on top of UPS charges) to get it out UPS abandoned property and
to the prizewinner--never mind the cost of all the time/emails/calls.
The only good outcome is that I'm on first-name terms with our local
UPS store staff.
Karen Reeds
>Date: Sat, 20 Aug 2005 00:09:12 -0700
>From: Shari Davis Benny Ferdman <[log in to unmask]>
>Subject: Help with Customs Problem
>
>Dear List,
>I'm hoping someone might have some insight to help us over an art
>shipping obstacle. At the conclusion of an exhibit we curated we had
>a painting shipped UPS back to the artist in Kenya. We insured the
>painting for $4000--the amount the artist valued the work at. A few
>weeks ago the artist e-mails us telling us that the painting has has
>been stuck in customs since May and that the customs office in
>Nairobi is asking $1500 for its release (due to the high value) as
>well as daily storage fees. i e-mailed the UPS customs partner in
>Kenya explaining the painting belonged to the artist, was on loan for
>an international exhibit, no money was exchanged, and it is now
>being returned to the artist. I told her I can fax loan agreement,
>more information about the exhibit etc. She replied asking me to send
>a more detailed letter she can submit to customs.
>The artist cannot pay this amount, the only other recourse is to have
>it shipped back to the send--hundreds of dollars! Or it will be
>auctioned off.
>Des anyone on the list have experience with this? Is there certain
>information or wordage to put on the letter to make it more likely
>the customs office will release it to the artist? What recourse do I
>have? Any help would be appreciated.
>Shari Davis
>Creative Ways
>Interactive Exhibits & Educational Resources.
--
Karen Reeds, Ph.D.
Guest Curator, Linnaeus & America
American Swedish Historical Museum, Philadelphia
http://www.americanswedish.org/linnaeus.html
Read about our first Linnaeus Day Talk & Walk (CityPaper 5/19/05) and
find out why the Philadelphia Inquirer (6/28/05) called Linnaeus "One
Significant Swede"
http://citypaper.net/articles/2005-05-19/mixpicks2.shtml
http://www.philly.com/mld/philly/entertainment/12000394.htm
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