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Police from Belgium, Germany and the Netherlands need help to identify 22 dead women and girls | World News


Police in Belgium, Germany and the Netherlands are asking for the public’s help to identify 22 women and girls who they believe have been murdered.

The bodies were discovered across the three European countries between October 1976 and August 2019.

“Most of the 22 victims died violently, and some were also abused or starved before they died,” said Carina van Leeuwen and Martin de Wit in a statement by the Netherlands police, which initiated the public appeal.

They added: “Partly because the women are likely from countries other than where they were found, their identities have not yet been established.

“It is possible that their bodies were left in our countries to impede criminal investigations.”

Image:
This tattoo was found on a woman’s left forearm. Her body was discovered in the Groot Schijn River in Antwerp, Belgium, in June 1992. Pic: Interpol

“We want to stress that we are looking for names,” said Carolien Opdecam, of the Belgian police force.

“The victim’s identity is often the key to unlocking the mysteries of a case.”

With some of the murdered women believed to have come from specific regions in Eastern Europe, identifying them may also provide evidence on the perpetrators of these crimes.

Anja Allendorf, of the German police, said: “In similar investigations, establishing the victim’s identity ultimately has led to the arrest of a suspect.”

The police forces of all three countries have come together to launch Operation Identify Me through Interpol.

A suitcase containing the torso of a female was found in a canal in Amsterdam in September 1992. The victim's hands, legs and other body parts were discovered elsewhere. Pic: Interpol
Image:
A suitcase containing the torso of a female was found in a canal in Amsterdam in September 1992. The victim’s hands, legs and other body parts were discovered elsewhere. Pic: Interpol

The international police group has for the first time made public some details of so-called black notices which are used to seek information and intelligence on unidentified bodies and to determine the circumstances surrounding the death.

Black notices are usually circulated internally among Interpol’s global network of police forces.

The cold cases include a woman with a flower tattoo who was found in the Groot Schijn River in Antwerp, Belgium; the discovery of a body which had been burned in a forest in Altena-Bergfeld in Germany; and the remains of a female believed to be 16-35 years old which were found in a bag in the IJ River in Amsterdam, the Netherlands.

The facial reconstruction of a woman whose body was found buried in a forest northwest of Berlin, Germany, in November 1998. She was dressed in men's clothing. Pic: Interpol
Image:
The facial reconstruction of a woman whose body was found buried in a forest northwest of Berlin, Germany, in November 1998. She was dressed in men’s clothing. Pic: Interpol

Details on each case have been made available on the Interpol website showing facial reconstructions of some of the victims, as well as videos and pictures of items such as jewellery and clothing which were discovered at the various sites where their remains were dumped.

It also includes information such as their estimated age, hair and eye colour and other physical characteristics.

Members of the public, particularly those who remember a missing friend or family member, are being invited to contact their relevant national police team should they have any information.

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This bracelet is believed to belong to a victim whose body was found wrapped in plastic in Amstelveen, the Netherlands in January 1995. Pic: Interpol
Image:
This bracelet is believed to belong to a victim whose body was found wrapped in plastic in Amstelveen, the Netherlands, in January 1995. Pic: Interpol

“Black Notices allow law enforcement agencies to collaborate and share information across borders, ultimately helping to bring closure to the families of the deceased and bring offenders to justice,” said Susan Hitchin, coordinator of Interpol’s DNA Unit.

“Advances in technology across the different fields of forensic human identification have been significant in helping solve cold cases.”



This story originally appeared on Skynews

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