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Ricominciano le ricerche di Joe Lynskey

Searches resume for Disappeared Lynskey

Le ricerche di Joe Lynskey

Search teams have returned to remote bogland in Co Meath to resume digs for Joe Lynskey, one of the Disappeared.

The 40-year-old went missing from west Belfast in August 1972.

The Cistercian monk was abducted, executed and secretly buried by the IRA.

The searches are being carried out close to Oristown Bog, where the remains of 23-year-old Brendan Megraw were recovered last year, after four searches spanning around 15 years.

Investigators working to recover the bodies of the Disappeared said they have now narrowed the search for Mr Lynskey to land at Coghalstown.

The area being searched is now part of a farm – but was once a peat bog.

Investigators believe they are working within a burial cluster.

It is suspected two more of the Disappeared – Kevin McKee and Seamus Wright – are buried in moorland only a few miles from the Oristown bog in an area near Wilkinstown, also in Co Meath.

Lead forensic scientist Geoff Knupfer has stressed the task ahead of them at the Lynskey search remained difficult.

He said: “We have good reason to believe that we are in the right area and that his remains lie somewhere in the six hectares (15 acres) site but while the terrain is not as rough as at Oristown where we found Brendan Megraw in October last year we still have a difficult and complex task ahead of us.

“We are satisfied that the time is right to bring in our team of forensic archaeologists to start the search beneath the surface.”

Contractors have been bringing equipment into the site over that last couple of days.

The Independent Commission for the Location of Victims’ Remains (ICLVR) brought in a sniffer dog late last year to help detect signs of human remains at the scene.

The commission, which was set up by the British and Irish governments in the wake of the Good Friday Agreement, is tasked with investigating the cases of 16 people killed and secretly buried by republicans during the Troubles.

All information passed to the body is confidential and cannot be used in criminal prosecutions.

To date, the remains of 10 people have been recovered.

Mr Knupfer, who also helped find the bodies of the victims of Moors murderers Ian Brady and Myra Hindley, appealed for more information on Mr Lynskey’s secret burial.

He added: “There are people who have information who have not come to the ICLVR even though there is a guarantee of complete confidentiality.

“It would be quite wrong to think that because we have started the search for Joe Lynskey that there is no need for someone who knows something of the events in Coghalstown in 1972 to give us that information.

“It might be the key to finding his remains and returning them to his family for a Christian burial.”

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René Querin

Di professione grafico e web designer, sono appassionato di trekking e innamorato dell'Irlanda e della sua storia. Insieme ad Andrea Varacalli ho creato e gestisco Les Enfants Terribles.

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