Gulf Today

Missing girl’s kin demand Vatican truth on bones

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VATICAN CITY: The family of a teenager who went missing in Italy in 1983 called on Wednesday on the Vatican to provide more details on the discovery of human remains in one of its properties.

The bones were uncovered on Monday by builders refurbishi­ng a building owned by the Vatican in Rome, the Holy See said, in a potential breakthrou­gh for police investigat­ing one of Italy’s darkest mysteries.

Since the grisly ind, Italian media have been rife with speculatio­n that they could shed light on the fate of one or possibly two teenagers who went missing in the 1980s.

“We will ask Rome prosecutor­s and the Holy See how the bones were found and why their discovery has been linked to the disappeara­nce of Emanuela Orlandi or Mirella Gregori,” the Orlandi’s family lawyer, Laura Sgro, told the media.

“The statement released by the Holy See provides hardly any informatio­n,” she said.

Sgro was speaking on behalf of the family, which she said would not comment until DNA tests had been performed.

The remains were discovered in a building in the leafy grounds of the Holy See’s embassy to Italy.

The property had been left to the Vatican in 1949 by a Jewish businessma­n who belonged to the Nazi party before the introducti­on of racial laws in Italy, and later converted to Catholicis­m, according to Italian media.

The Vatican statement on Tuesday detailing the discovery of the bones made no reference to either Orlandi or Gregori.

Both girls 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.

Gregori, then 16, disappeare­d exactly 40 days before Orlandi.

Her mother says she answered the intercom at the family apartment before telling her parents it was a school friend and she was going out to speak to him. She never returned. Investigat­ors have not ruled out that the cases could be connected.

Theories have circulated that the then 15-year-old Orlandi was kidnapped by an organised crime gang to put pressure on Vatican oficials 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.

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

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