Treasure hunt for mysterious train begins

MYTH OR REALITY? Workers dig the ground to verify the existence of the so-called “Nazi Gold train” in Walbrzych, Poland, on Tuesday. (AFP)
Updated 17 August 2016
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Treasure hunt for mysterious train begins

WARSAW: Polish and German treasure hunters have started digging at a site in southwest Poland where they believe a Nazi-era train rumored to have gone missing is hidden — despite the skepticism of experts.
Andreas Koper and Piotr Richter said last year they had located the train buried underground. According to local legend, it was carrying looted jewels and guns and disappeared into a tunnel ahead of advancing Soviet Red Army forces in 1945, toward the end of World War Two.
They secured the permissions needed to begin digging despite a study by AGH University of Science and Technology in Krakow concluding that a train is unlikely to be buried in the location the two amateur explorers have specified.
On Tuesday, the pair led a team of explorers in excavations at three separate sites inside a fenced-off area in the district of Walbrzych.
“We have to find a railway track, probably the entrance to a railway tunnel and, if the tunnel exists, there should be a train there,” Andrzej Galik, a spokesman for the treasure hunters, told Polish media.
“What do we expect? To unveil a sort of time capsule, something from that era, from the period of World War Two ... We are hoping to be successful.”
Galik said ground-penetrating radar examinations were “very promising.” The team is expected to announce findings in coming days.


Germany’s Merz and Ukraine’s Zelensky praise truce efforts

Updated 30 January 2026
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Germany’s Merz and Ukraine’s Zelensky praise truce efforts

  • Donald Trump said Vladimir Putin had agreed to a week-long halt on attacks

BERLIN: German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and President Volodymyr Zelensky on Thursday welcomed “efforts in favor of a truce,” Berlin said, after Donald Trump said Vladimir Putin had agreed to a week-long halt on attacks on Ukraine’s power grid.
Merz at the same time stressed that “the systematic and brutal destruction of Ukraine’s civilian infrastructure by Russian attacks” was “still ongoing,” which he condemned “in the strongest terms,” his spokesman, Stefan Kornelius, said.