The small eastern Chinese village of Yangchun will square off against a Dutch collector, whom they said bought the stolen Buddha statue containing the remains of a monk in Hong Kong in 1996, a lawyer representing the village said.
The human-sized sitting Buddha statue, called the "Zhanggong Patriarch", disappeared from a temple in Yangchun in late 1995 after being worshipped for centuries, Jan Holthuis said.
"We are going to present our arguments to a judge to explain why the villagers want their statue back," he told AFP.
The statue was subsequently withdrawn.
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Relatives of the monk -- who Holthuis says have written proof of their family ties -- are entitled to have their ancestor returned to his rightful place, the lawyer said.
The lawyers will argue that according to Dutch law "a person is not allowed to have a known body in their possession," Holthuis said.
"We also have enough evidence to prove that the statue is indeed the one that was stolen from the temple," he added.
However, today the statue's immediate whereabouts were not known as the original collector allegedly swapped it with a third party in 2015, Holthuis said.
The Amsterdam-based collector's lawyers declined to comment to AFP.
The case is being closely watched as it could mark one of the first successful retrievals of Chinese relics in court, the state-run Chinese newspaper Global Times reported yesterday.
Beijing in recent years has vehemently protested the sale of artefacts it says were stolen, particularly in the 19th century, when European powers began encroaching on its territory.