The Star Malaysia

Bones found at Vatican annex may be clue to 1983 mystery

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VATICAN CITY: Human remains have been discovered at a Rome property owned by the Vatican, the Holy See said, in a potential breakthrou­gh for police investigat­ing one of Italy’s darkest mysteries.

“During restoratio­n works in a space annexed to the Apostolic Nunciature of Italy ... fragments of human bone were found,” the Vatican said in a statement, in reference to the diplomatic office of the Holy See in Rome.

A police investigat­ion is underway to establish the age and gender of the body and date of death.

Media reports said the remains were discovered on Monday.

Detectives will be looking at whether they are a DNA match for Emanuela Orlandi or Mirella Gregori, both of whom were underage when they went missing separately in Rome in 1983.

Orlandi was the daughter of a member of the Vatican’s police, and was last seen on June 22, 1983 when leaving a music class.

Theories have circulated that the then 15-year-old was kidnapped by an organised crime gang to pressure Vatican officials to recover a loan.

Another claim was that she was taken to force the release from prison of Mehmet Ali Agca, the Turk who attempted to assassinat­e Pope Jean Paul II in 1981.

Her brother Pietro has been leading a decades-long campaign to find out what happened to her and has accused the Vatican of silence and even complicity in the case.

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