Shafaq News – Paris
The theft of royal jewelryfrom Paris’s landmark Louvre Museum revealed serious security flaws and damagedthe country’s global image, France’s Justice Minister Gerald Darmanin acknowledgedon Monday.
“What is certain is that wehave failed,” Darmanin told France Inter radio, pointing out that thieves wereable to park a mechanical lift in central Paris, scale it within minutes, andsteal priceless artifacts undeterred.
Newly appointed InteriorMinister Laurent Nunez also weighed in, calling museum security across France a“major weak point.”
The Louvre, which was set toreopen at 9:00 a.m. Monday, remained closed as police widened their search forsuspects who stole eight 19th-century royal jewels from the Apollo Galleryearly Sunday.
A source close to theinvestigation, cited by Agence France-Presse, said the thieves arrived justafter opening, used an extendable ladder to access a window, cut through theglass, and smashed display cases with power tools in a heist lasting only sevenminutes.
Authorities suspect aprofessional, possibly international, crew, with 60 investigators assigned tothe case and a visitor-filmed video—now circulating in French media—capturingpart of the break-in.
Among the stolen pieces werean emerald-and-diamond necklace gifted by Napoleon to his wife Empress MarieLouise, a diamond-encrusted diadem owned by Empress Eugénie, and a necklaceonce belonging to Queen Marie-Amelie, the last queen of France, containing 631diamonds and eight sapphires.
One piece—the crown of EmpressEugénie—was reportedly dropped and damaged during the thieves' escape, asmuseum staff intervened and forced the group to abandon tools and equipment,according to the Ministry of Culture.
Paris prosecutor Laure Beccuauconfirmed investigators are pursuing two main leads: either the heist wascommissioned by a private collector or tied to an internationalmoney-laundering operation.
This marks the Louvre’s firstmajor theft since 1998, when a Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot painting vanishedand was never recovered.
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