/ 6 February 2006

Museum visitor banned after R1,07m mishap

A hapless visitor who accidentally smashed a set of rare 300-year-old Chinese vases at a British museum after tripping up on his shoelaces said on Monday he has been banned from returning.

Nick Flynn, a regular visitor of the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge, south-east England, told BBC radio he has received a letter from directors asking him not to come back — at least for a while.

The 42-year-old, who tripped as he came down a flight of stairs, causing the £100 000 (about R1,07-million) mishap, said: ”It was just a regrettable accident.

”I snagged my shoelace, missed the step and crash, bang, wallop, there were a million pieces of high-quality Qing ceramics lying around underneath me.

”I suppose that, seeing they were the prize possession of the museum, they were just lying on a window sill … I thought they might take a bit better care of them.”

The three Qing vases, dating from the late 17th or early 18th century, had been at the museum for at least 40 years and were among its best-known artefacts.

After receiving the banning letter from museum director Duncan Robinson, Flynn said: ”I think they are a bit embarrassed at the moment, with them [the vases] being worth such a considerable amount, and there is no way my pocket will stretch to reimburse them for the damage I’ve done.”

Flynn, who is single and receives disability benefit following a bike accident, explained he is still sore after the tumble, which happened last month, and that regular staff have not harboured a grudge.

”I think this is just the directors or trustees because they seem to have got egg on their faces,” he suggested.

Police have ruled out malicious damage. — Sapa-AFP