‘Priceless’ jewels stolen from German state museum

Published November 26, 2019
DRESDEN: A view of the road in front of the Residenzschloss (Residence Palace), which houses the Green Vault museum. Authorities said on Monday thieves had carried out a brazen heist at one of the world’s oldest museums that contains priceless treasures from around the world.—AP
DRESDEN: A view of the road in front of the Residenzschloss (Residence Palace), which houses the Green Vault museum. Authorities said on Monday thieves had carried out a brazen heist at one of the world’s oldest museums that contains priceless treasures from around the world.—AP

BERLIN: Robbers made off with three priceless diamond sets from a state museum in Dresden on Monday, police and museum directors said, in what German media have described as the biggest art heist since World War Two.

The thieves broke into the Green Vault at Dresden’s Royal Palace — home to around 4,000 precious objects of ivory, gold, silver and jewels — at dawn after a power cut deactivated the alarm.

The stolen items included brilliant-cut diamonds that belonged to a collection of jewellery of 18th-century Saxony ruler Augustus the Strong.

“We are talking here about items of inestimable art-historical and cultural-historical value,” the director of Dresden’s state art collections Marion Ackermann told reporters at a press conference on Monday.

“We cannot put an exact value on them because they are priceless,” said Ackermann, adding she was “shocked by the brutality of the break-in.” The thieves launched the brazen raid after a fire broke out at an electrical panel near the museum in the early hours of Monday, deactivating its alarm as well as street lighting, police said, adding that investigations were ongoing to determine if there was a link to the robbery.

Despite the power cut, a surveillance camera kept working and filmed two men breaking in.

They smashed a window and cut through a fence before making their way to a display case “in a targeted manner” and destroying it, the head of Dresden police Volker Lange said. They remain on the run.

Published in Dawn, November 26th, 2019

Opinion

Editorial

Plugging the gap
06 May, 2024

Plugging the gap

IN Pakistan, bias begins at birth for the girl child as discriminatory norms, orthodox attitudes and poverty impede...
Terrains of dread
Updated 06 May, 2024

Terrains of dread

Restored faith in the police is unachievable without political commitment and interprovincial support.
Appointment rules
Updated 06 May, 2024

Appointment rules

If the judiciary had the power to self-regulate, it ought to have exercised it instead of involving the legislature.
Hasty transition
Updated 05 May, 2024

Hasty transition

Ostensibly, the aim is to exert greater control over social media and to gain more power to crack down on activists, dissidents and journalists.
One small step…
05 May, 2024

One small step…

THERE is some good news for the nation from the heavens above. On Friday, Pakistan managed to dispatch a lunar...
Not out of the woods
05 May, 2024

Not out of the woods

PAKISTAN’S economic vitals might be showing some signs of improvement, but the country is not yet out of danger....