Qatari-owned jewels stolen in audacious Venice heist
Thieves made off with several items of Indian maharajahs´ treasures owned by a member of the Qatari royal family after an audacious heist Wednesday at the Doge´s palace in Venice, police said.
ROME: Thieves made off with several items of Indian maharajahs´ treasures owned by a member of the Qatari royal family after an audacious heist Wednesday at the Doge´s palace in Venice, police said.
Italian authorities investigating the theft put at around a million euros ($1.2 million) the overall value of the collection of Treasures of the Mughals and the Maharajahs on display.
Two thieves got away with earrings and a brooch on the final day of a four-month exhibition covering some 270 items showcasing five centuries of Indian craftsmanship.
Investigators said the pair had managed to take the items from a reinforced display case after deactivating the alarm system before melting into the crowd and making good their escape.
The alarm was raised only several hours later at the palace, known as the Palazzo Ducale in Italy, in central Venice at one end of Saint Mark´s Square.
"We are clearly dealing here with two skilled professionals who managed to pull off their feat despite all the display rooms being fitted with technologically highly sophisticated (alarm) systems," chief police commissioner Vito Gagliardi said.
The collection was assembled by Sheikh Hamad bin Abdullah Al Thani and now belongs to Qatar´s ruling family.
-
UK inflation unexpectedly rises to 3.4% in December, the first increase in five months
-
Trump vows ‘no going back’ on Greenland ahead of Davos visit
-
Japan’s ex-PM Shinzo Abe’s killer is set to be sentenced: How much punishment could he face?
-
Therapist killed in office as former client launches knife attack
-
North Carolina woman accused of serving victims with poisoned drinks
-
'Greenland will stay Greenland', former Trump adviser hints at new twist
-
Stranger knocks, then opens fire on Indiana judge and wife
-
Japan unveils anti-ship missile with ‘barrel-roll’ evasion to outsmart defenses