UK woman Rita Roberts identified 31 years after Belgium murder


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Her family said the news was “shocking and heartbreaking”.

In Summary
  • Rita Roberts’ family spotted her distinctive tattoo in a BBC report, according to policing agency Interpol.
  • The last contact the 31-year-old had with her family was via a postcard in May 1992. Her body was found the following month.A British woman has been identified more than 30 years after her murder in Belgium, following the launch of a landmark police campaign.

    Rita Roberts’ family spotted her distinctive tattoo in a BBC report, according to policing agency Interpol.

    The last contact the 31-year-old had with her family was via a postcard in May 1992. Her body was found the following month.

    Her family said the news was “shocking and heartbreaking”.

    “Our passionate, loving and free-spirited sister was cruelly taken away,” they said in a statement, shared by Interpol. “Whilst the news has been difficult to process, we are incredibly grateful to have uncovered what happened to Rita.”

    A beautiful person

    Ms Roberts was one of 22 murdered women who police in Europe were seeking to identify through a campaign launched earlier this year, called Operation Identify Me.

    The campaign marked the first time Interpol had gone public with a list of so-called black notices, seeking information about unidentified bodies. Such notices are normally only circulated internally among Interpol’s network of police forces throughout the world.

    Most of the victims were aged between 15 and 30. The full list – available on Interpol’s website – includes details about the women, photographs of possible identifying items, and, in some cases, new facial reconstructions and information about the cases.

    Ms Roberts had travelled from her home in Cardiff to the Belgian city of Antwerp in February 1992. Her body was found lying against a grate in a river four months later, after she had been violently killed.

    Her family said she was “a beautiful person who adored travelling” and loved her family, adding: “She had the ability to light up a room, and wherever she went, she was the life and soul of the party. We hope that wherever she is now, she is at peace.”

    Interpol’s head of police services, Stephen Kavanagh, said a family member identified her after spotting her tattoo – a black flower with green leaves and “R’Nick” written underneath – in a BBC News article, published in May this year.


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