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A team of Myanmar divers claims to have discovered a legendary bell in the murky depths of the Yangon river - with the help of dragon spirits - in the latest twist to a 400-year-old drama that has gripped the nation. Dozens of divers, equipped only with goggles and plastic oxygen hoses, have plunged into the fast-flowing waters in search of the long-lost Dhammazedi bell, in a spectacle that has generated scepticism but also attracted lines of spectators along the riverbank since the search began earlier this month.
The group is the latest in a series of treasure hunters eager to try to raise the near-mythical giant bell, which is said to have sunk without trace after being stolen from Yangon's revered Shwedagon Pagoda by a Portuguese mercenary in the 1600s. It was reputedly loaded onto a boat which sank under the weight. "After asking permission from all noble persons and saints, we definitively declare that we have found the Dhammazedi bell," said a statement from lead organiser San Lin.
He has not so far provided any proof. The search has attracted criticism among Myanmar historians, some of whom question the very existence of the bell. Organisers have rejected hi-tech equipment in favour of spiritual practices, performing rituals on their boat in the centre of the swollen river to appease dragon spirits said to be protecting the bell. "It can be found if we organise and research systematically. But it cannot be found like this - following astrologers' advice and inviting Nats (spirits), dragons and galouns (mythical birds)," Chit San Win, of the Myanmar Historical Commission, told AFP.
San Lin, who says he originally saw the bell on the riverbed during a 1998 salvage attempt and has received funding from a local private bank, vowed to lift the bell from the water within days. Fashioned mainly out of bronze, the Dhammazedi bronze bell is said to have weighed 294 tonnes - about the same as the maximum take-off weight of a Boeing 777.
Historians believe it was donated to the Shwedagon pagoda in 1484 by the Mon King Dhammazedi, who ruled the southern part of Myanmar at the time. It was then believed to have been stolen from the revered temple by Portuguese merchant Filipe De Brito e Nicote - known locally as Nga Zinka - who had seized control of an area south of Yangon and wanted to melt down the bronze to make cannon. While no definitive proof has yet been uncovered of the bell's existence, the search operation has garnered a following of hopeful supporters.

Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2014

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