France|With the help of the campaign, Interpol aims to identify victims who have remained anonymous.
A teenage girl murdered in the south of France more than forty years ago. It is still not known who he was.
Now the international criminal police organization Interpol is trying to identify the victim with the help of tips from the public, says, for example, the British broadcasting company BBC. It’s about a campaign called Operation Indentify Me.
In the campaign, not only the identity of the teenage girl is clarified, but also the identity of 45 other female victims who have remained anonymous. The campaign was also organized last year.
in France a few clear clues remain about the murdered teenage girl: red shoes, two necklaces and a British ten-pence coin, the BBC reports.
The girl’s body was found in a rest area under leaves in 1982. According to the BBC, the body had been there for many months. According to the BBC, the remains of the girl can no longer be found. It makes the work of liquidators complicated.
Now already retired Alain Brillet once worked on the case. According to the BBC, he describes it as a “triple riddle”.
“The strangest and most unbelievable thing was that he had been murdered, because we knew he had been murdered, but we never found out what his name was, where he came from, or who had killed him,” says Brillet.
By identifying the victims want to bring justice to them, Interpol says.
“These women have suffered a double injustice,” says the coordinator of Interpol’s dna unit by Susan Hitch.
According to Hitchin, the women have been victimized twice, as they have been killed violently and furthermore they have not been identified.
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