“One meeting should be in December and the next one at the beginning of next year ... A complex litigation with great political nuances,” TASS quoted him as saying.

According to him, in Crimea they count on the fact that "a civilized approach will prevail."

Muradov noted that according to the contracts concluded between the museums of the Crimea and Amsterdam, artifacts should be returned to where they were found. He added that all artifacts were found in the Crimea.

In September, Crimean museums presented new evidence in the case of Scythian gold.

A collection of Scythian gold was exported from Crimea to an exhibition at the Allard Pearson Museum in Amsterdam in 2014. After the Crimea became part of Russia, both the peninsula museums and Ukraine claimed their rights to gold.