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AUCTION

‘Stolen’ book of world leaders’ autographs turns up in Spain

Serbia is seeking help from Interpol to recover a dozen autographs from world leaders allegedly stolen from commemoration books following the death of Yugoslav leader Josip Broz Tito, officials said Tuesday, after the pages turned up for auction in Spain.

'Stolen' book of world leaders' autographs turns up in Spain
Photo: Belchonock/Depositphotos

The pages, whose signatories include then US vice president George H.W. Bush, the last Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, late Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe, are apparently up for auction in Spain this week.

The documents were posthumous tributes to Tito, who led socialist Yugoslavia from the end of World War II until his death in 1980. They were written into tribute books during official visits by the leaders to Yugoslavia in the years that followed.

Following a media report that the autographs had been stolen, Belgrade's Museum of Yugoslav History launched an internal probe and established that the pages were missing from the tribute books that were on display in a mausoleum that is part of the museum's complex.

“We reported the case to police and they will inform Interpol… We are waiting for a response,” museum official Ana Radic told AFP.    

The theft appears to have taken place before the museum took over the running of the mausoleum in 2015, she explained.   

“We also contacted the auction house and asked them to cancel the auction and provide us with additional information on the documents so we can confirm their authenticity” and recover them, Radic said.   

The auction in Malaga is scheduled for June 3rd.

The director of the British-based auction house said a colleague managing the sale “has been in touch with the relevant authorities and is complying with their requests for further information regarding the documents”.   

“In the rare event that the ownership of documents is brought into question then we are always willing to assist the relevant parties in further investigations and, if necessary, withdraw documents from the auction until the rightful owner can be established,” Richard Davie of Autograph Auctions told AFP by email, without elaborating.   

Among the other autographs that have gone missing are those of India's first female prime minister Indira Gandhi, assassinated Swedish premier Olof Palme, Cambodia's king Norodom Sihanouk, late Syrian president Hafez al-Assad and Romanian communist dictator Nicolae Ceausescu.

A decade after Tito's death, federal Yugoslavia fell apart in a series of bloody wars, with its former republics emerging as independent states in the western Balkans.

By Katarina Subasic / AFP

READ MORE: Spanish police recover priceless cultural treasures in megabust of international art thieves.

DIAMOND

Rare pink diamond to go under hammer in Geneva

An extremely rare pink diamond will be auctioned in Geneva on November 11 by Sotheby's, which says it is worth between $23 and $38 million.

Rare pink diamond to go under hammer in Geneva
A model poses with the “The Spirit of the Rose” diamond during a press preview on Friday. Photo: Fabrice Coffrini/AFP
Named “The Spirit of the Rose” after a famous Russian ballet, the 14.83-carat diamond mined in Russia is the biggest ever to go under the hammer in its category — “fancy vivid purple-pink”.
 
The occurrence of pink diamonds in nature is extremely rare in any size,” Gary Schuler, head of Sotheby's jewellery division, said in a statement. “Only one per cent of all pink diamonds are larger than 10-carats.”
   
Speaking to AFP, Benoit Repellin, head of fine jewellery auctions at Sotheby's Geneva, said the oval-shaped diamond was “completely pure.”
 
 
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The rough diamond was unearthed by Russia's Alrosa — one of the world's leading diamond producers — in the Republic of Sakha in the northeast of the country in July 2017.
   
Repellin said it took a painstaking year for cutting masters to turn the diamond into its polished form.
   
Sotheby's said the world auction record for a diamond and any gemstone or jewel was the “CTF Pink Star”, a 59.60-carat oval pink diamond that sold for $71.2 million in Hong Kong in 2017.
   
According to Repellin, five out of the 10 most valuable diamonds ever sold at auction were pink.
   
The sale of this gem coincides with the closure of the world's largest pink diamond mine in Australia after it exhausted its reserves of the precious stones.
   
The Argyle mine, in the remote Kimberley region of Western Australia, churned out more than 90 percent of the world's pink diamonds.
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