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Image caption, The 3,000-year-old Egyptian head is currently on display at the auction house in Bangor By Amy Murray BBC News NI Published 2 hours ago A Northern Ireland auction house has come under fire from a number of academics over it selling human remains, including a 3,000-year-old Egyptian mummy head. Anthropologists have questioned whether it's right for On The Square Emporium to sell the remains, with one saying "just because something is legal doesn't mean it's ethical". The auction house's owner Justin Lowry has defended the sale. "I appreciate there are people that see human remains as something that's religious, but to a lot of people once you die and your soul, or whatever is you, has left the body," he said. Image caption, Another item on sale is a Dayak tribal trophy skull from Borneo, Indonesia. "What is left is an inanimate object. Like all other objects, some people have no interest in this, some people think it's repulsive, but other people like them and they collect them." However, a Labour MP who is sponsoring a bill to ban the sale of human remains in the UK, Bell Ribeiro-Addy, referenced the On The Square sale in a post on X and said: "The government must legislate to end this macabre trade." The auction house, in Bangor, County Down, has two human heads listed for sale in an ongoing auction: the 3,000-year-old Egyptian head and a Dayak tribal trophy skull from Borneo, Indonesia. Lowry said a local buyer has been secured for the Egyptian head. He added that it will remain in the emporium until the end of September so the public can see it. It will then be going into a private collection. Lowry said he understands the argument that the human remains should be "disposed of or buried" but said any call for the items should be studied was "hypocritical", adding: "So only people who have doctorate degrees or work in museums should be allowed to look at and appreciate these things?" "The Egyptian mummy head is something from 3,000 years ago. It has an intrinsic value and an ownership, " he added. "Why should someone hand over £20,000 of stuff that they have bought, that they have appreciated?" Image caption, Dr Trish Biers says the sale of human remains may be legal, but that does not make it ethical The joint letter, sent in April by anthropologists from the British Association of Biological Anthropology and Osteoarcheology (BABAO), raised issues with the origin of the items for sale from On The Square, as it said very few imported human remains were obtained ethically or legally. Dr Trish Biers, a human remains expert on the board of trustees for BABAO, told Good Morning Ulster that she understood the "fascination around the dead, but they are human beings". "They haven't stopped being human beings, they've simply stopped breathing," she said. "I think selling human beings is what's really ethically problematic." How old is the Egyptian mummy head? The auction house listing describes the Egyptian head as being radio-carbon da
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