Rita Roberts
Rita Roberts

LYON: A woman found murdered 31 years ago in a river in Belgium has been identified over three decades later thanks to her flower tattoo and an international appeal, Interpol said on Tuesday.

The Lyon-based global police organisation said she was Rita Roberts from Cardiff in Wales and British.

Roberts, found lying against a grate in the river Het Groot Schijn in Antwerp on June 3, 1992, had a tattoo of a black flower with green leaves and the inscription “R’Nick” on her right forearm.

She was 31 when she moved to Antwerp from Cardiff in February 1992 and last communicated with her relatives via postcard in May 1992, according to Interpol.

“For three decades, the victim remained nameless,” Interpol said. But a breakthrough came after the police organisation in May launched a campaign to identify 22 women believed to have been murdered in Belgium, Germany and The Netherlands, but whose identity was never found in cases dating back decades.

“A family member in the United Kingdom recognised the tattoo on the news and notified Interpol and Belgian authorities,” Interpol said in a statement. The Operation Identify Me campaign has seen Interpol for the first time share previously confidential information — so called Black Notices — about unsolved cases hoping for input from the public. Rita Roberts is the first case of the 22 victims to have been identified in the campaign although some 1,250 tips have been received from the public.

‘**A beautiful person’**

Rita Roberts has been “formally identified” by her family who travelled to Belgium to meet investigators. The family have asked for the media not to contact them during their grieving process, Interpol said.

“Whilst the news has been difficult to process, we are incredibly grateful to have uncovered what happened to Rita,” the family was quoted in the statement as saying.

Police in Durham, England, said they had supported the family, some of whom live in the area, “during what has been a heartbreaking time for them”.

Durham Constabulary called the case “historic”. Durham police quoted a statement from the family, who had asked to remain anonymous, saying they had last heard from her via a postcard from Belgium in May 1992.

“The news was shocking and heartbreaking. Our passionate, loving, and free-spirited sister was cruelly taken away,” the family said.

“There are no words to truly express the grief we felt at that time, and still feel today.

“Rita was a beautiful person who adored travelling. She loved her family, especially her nephews and nieces, and always wanted to have a family of her own,” the family said.

“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.”

Published in Dawn, November 15th, 2023

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