Saturday Star

Two stolen Van Gogh paintings recovered after 14 years

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AMSTERDAM/ROME: Italian police have recovered two paintings by the Dutch artist Vincent van Gogh that were stolen in Amsterdam 14 years ago, as part of an operation against the Camorra Mafia group that operates around Naples.

The Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam said the paintings had been removed from their frames but appear to have suffered only slight damage.

It was not immediatel­y clear when they would be returned to the museum, which is the largest repository of Van Gogh’s work.

The paintings, Congregati­on Leaving the Reformed Church in Nuenen (1884/5) and View of the Sea at Schevening­en (1882), are both from relatively early in Van Gogh’s short, tempestuou­s career.

Italian financial police seized “assets worth tens of millions of euros from a Camorra group involved in internatio­nal cocaine traffickin­g”. They said the assets included the paintings, which were “priceless”.

“They’re safe,” said Van Gogh Museum director Axel Rueger in a statement. “I no longer dared to hope that I could ever say that, after so many years.”

Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi informed his Dutch counterpar­t, Mark Rutte, about the police operation before the funeral in Jerusalem of former Israeli leader Shimon Peres, a source in Renzi’s office said.

In the 2002 heist, thieves used a ladder to climb on to the museum’s roof and break into the building, escaping by sliding down a rope.

Two men were later caught and convicted of the theft thanks in part to DNA evidence linking them. – Reuters

 ??  ?? RARE TREASURE: The painting The Beach At Schevening­en During A Storm by Vincent van Gogh.
RARE TREASURE: The painting The Beach At Schevening­en During A Storm by Vincent van Gogh.

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