GENEVA, Feb. 19 (Xinhua) -- Swiss police have
recovered two paintings stolen from a Zurich museum by armed robbers over a week
ago in Switzerland's biggest theft, the official Swissinfo news website reported
on Tuesday.
The two Impressionist paintings by Vincent van Gogh
and Claude Monet were found in an abandoned car parked at a psychiatric clinic
on Monday afternoon.
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Buehrle collection director Lukas Gloor
(L) and police spokesman Marco Cortesi hold a news conference in Zurich
Feb. 19, 2008. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo
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They were among four artworks valued at 180 million
Swiss francs (163 million U.S. dollars) that were stolen from the private Buhrle
museum.
Museum director Lukas Gloor, who formally identified
the paintings, told a news conference on Tuesday that he was relieved.
"The injury we suffered on Feb. 10 has partially been
healed," he said. "Both paintings are still in perfect condition, and still look
the way they were painted."
Police described the heist last week as the biggest
ever robbery committed in Switzerland and almost certainly the biggest in
Europe.
The three masked men who entered the museum with pistols are still at large.