-
Robert Mueller, ex-FBI chief who led Trump-Russia probe, dead at 81
-
Milan move to within five points of Serie A leaders Inter
-
Duplantis masterclass as Kerr and record-setter Ehammer shine
-
Rosenior urges Chelsea to 'forget the noise' after damaging loss
-
Marquez ambushed Di Giannantonio to win Brazil sprint
-
Sweden's Duplantis wins fourth world indoor pole vault title
-
Liverpool, Chelsea slip up in Champions League race
-
WHO sends first overland convoy from emergencies hub to Beirut
-
Everton rub salt in Chelsea wounds as Champions League race tightens
-
Coach Mignoni returns but Toulon crash to Stade Francais
-
Robert Mueller, ex-FBI chief who led Trump-Russia inquiry, dead at 81
-
Sinner and Pegula advance to third round at Miami Open
-
Britain's Kerr outsprints Hocker for world indoor 3,000m gold
-
Kane backs Tuchel's call to rest him from England friendly
-
NBA fines 76ers' Drummond, Magic's Suggs $25,000 each
-
Switzerland's Ehammer sets indoor heptathlon world record
-
Pogacar 'relieved' by Milan-San Remo triumph, gunning to complete Monument set
-
World Athletics decision to hand Asia two world indoors 'strategic' - Coe
-
Trump threatens to use ICE agents for airport security control
-
Kane moves closer to goals record as Bayern sink Union
-
Pogacar ends long wait for Milan-San Remo glory after edging epic
-
US says 'took out' Iran base threatening blocked Hormuz oil route
-
Di Giannantonio takes Brazil MotoGP pole ahead of Bezzecchi, Marquez
-
Welbeck scores twice to dent Liverpool's top-five hopes
-
US strikes Iran bases threatening blocked Hormuz oil route
-
Pirovano wins World Cup downhill title, Aicher puts pressure on Shiffrin
-
Doroshchuk wins Ukraine's second world indoor gold, Hodgkinson and Alfred coast
-
K-pop kings BTS stun Seoul in '2.0' comeback concert
-
French prosecutors suspect Musk encouraged deepfakes row to inflate X value
-
Mbappe 100 percent, Bellingham fit, says Real Madrid's Arbeloa
-
Iranians mark Eid as Tehran reports strike on nuclear plant
-
Kenya, Uganda open rail extension burdened by Chinese debt
-
K-pop kings BTS rock Seoul in comeback concert
-
Invincible Japan edge Australia to win Women's Asian Cup
-
Italy's Paris claims first win of season in World Cup downhill finale
-
In Finland, divers learn to explore icy polar waters
-
Dortmund extend injured captain Can's contract
-
Iranians mark Eid as Trump mulls winding down war
-
Matisse's last years cut out -- but not pasted -- at Paris expo
-
BTS fans take over central Seoul for K-pop kings' comeback
-
Star jockey McDonald becomes horse racing's most prolific Group 1 winner
-
Israel strikes Tehran, Beirut as Trump mulls 'winding down' war
-
Pistons top Warriors to clinch NBA playoff berth
-
Tickets to toothbrushes: BTS's money-making machine
-
Top-ranked Alcaraz, Sabalenka win Miami openers
-
After Cuba beckons, Miami entrepreneurs are mostly reluctant to invest in the island
-
Peru's crowded presidential race zeroes in on organized crime
-
Taiwan's Lin to compete in first international event since Paris gender row
-
BTS takes over central Seoul for comeback concert
-
Jury signals tech titans on hook for social media addiction
Van Gogh paintings snatched then found
Following the recovery of a Vincent van Gogh painting snatched from a Dutch museum during the Covid-19 lockdown, AFP looks back at some other heists involving works by the Dutch master:
- 'Poppy Flowers' taken twice -
On August 21, 2010, Van Gogh's "Poppy Flowers", worth $55 million at the time, was cut out of its frame in broad daylight at the Mohamed Mahmoud Khalil Museum outside Cairo.
An investigation revealed that the museum's alarm system did not work and that 30 out of 47 surveillance cameras were out of order.
It was the second time the small painting from 1887, which is still missing, had been stolen -- the first was in 1997, when it was taken from the same museum and was found only 10 years later, in Kuwait.
- Left in car park -
Van Gogh's "Blossoming Chestnut Branches" (1890), among four Impressionist masterpieces valued at more than 112 million euros, was stolen from a Zurich museum on February 10, 2008, in one of Europe's biggest-ever art heists.
Three masked men entered the Emil Buehrle Collection at the Kunsthaus Zurich, held up staff at gunpoint, loaded the paintings by Cezanne, Degas, Monet and Van Gogh into a car and sped off.
The Van Gogh and the Monet were later found in an abandoned vehicle in the car park of a nearby psychiatric hospital.
- Found in a Manchester loo -
On April 27, 2003, a Van Gogh watercolour, "The Ramparts of Paris" (1887), was stolen from the Whitworth Art Gallery in Manchester, northern England, along with two other paintings, one by Picasso, the other by Gauguin.
The police quickly received a tip-off leading to a public toilet just metres away, where they found the paintings rolled up inside a cardboard tube. The Van Gogh suffered a tear in the corner and the two others showed water damage.
The thief left a note claiming that he or she merely wanted to highlight the gallery's inadequate security.
- Recovered after 14 years -
On December 7, 2002, two Van Gogh works valued at several million euros were stolen from the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam in the middle of the night.
The two Dutch thieves climbed onto the roof, smashed a window with a sledgehammer and snatched the nearest Van Goghs they could reach.
The paintings -- "View of the Sea at Scheveningen" (1882) and the 1884/5 "Congregation Leaving the Reformed Church in Nuenen" -- were recovered by Italian investigators 14 years later, when they raided a home belonging to a mafia drug baron near Naples.
- Half-hour heist -
At dawn on April 14, 1991, gunmen stole 20 major paintings from the Van Gogh Museum in one of the most spectacular art thefts since World War II.
But the heist of the century was over within 35 minutes, when the paintings, stuffed in garment bags, were recovered from a getaway vehicle abandoned near a train station just 10 minutes from the museum.
The paintings should have been transferred to another car, but the plan was foiled by a mechanical hitch.
T.Wright--AT