‘Smash, grab, melt it down’ : how material value likely motivated the Louvre heist
Experts say thieves would struggle to find a buyer if the stolen goods remained intact To break into the world’s most-visited museum in broad daylight, grab eight pieces of priceless Napoleonic jewellery and vanish into the Paris traffic on humble scooters may seem like the most audacious of (…)
Site référencé:
The Guardian (South&CentralAsia)
6710.jpg?width=140&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=eacea74fe3cd36040a1731d937e1ddb4, 6710.jpg?width=460&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=ac91a85cead753b1432b035f777ae640, 6710.jpg?width=700&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=5fb9bf9e122fe67e198443878ef3144a
The Guardian (South&CentralAsia)
Nicolas Sarkozy enters prison to begin five-year sentence over criminal conspiracy
21/10/2025
On the trail of the guano miners – in pictures
21/10/2025
‘The cars just turn them into mush’ : can Britain’s toads be saved from traffic and terrible decline ?
21/10/2025
Houseplant clinic : what are the brown patches on my prickly pear ?
21/10/2025
I Deliver Parcels in Beijing by Hu Anyan review – startling stories of China’s new precarity
21/10/2025
David Blunkett backs proposal for skilled migrants to train British workers
21/10/2025