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Radar detects object believed to be missing Nazi gold train

WATCH ABOVE: Two men are claiming to have solved a mystery that has spanned seven decades. But as Emily Elias reports, they aren’t about to give up the goods without a significant reward.

WARSAW, Poland – A Polish official said Friday he has seen an image made by ground-penetrating radar that seemed to prove the discovery of an armoured Nazi train missing in southwestern Poland since World War II.

Local lore says a German train filled with gold, gems and armaments went missing around the city of Walbrzych while it was fleeing the Red Army in the spring of 1945. Fortune-hunters have looked for the so-called “gold train” for decades, and in the communist era, the Polish army and security services carried out apparently fruitless searches for it.

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During the war, the Germans built a system of underground tunnels in the mountainous region of Walbrzych and the city of Wroclaw, from where the train is believed to have departed. The area was German territory at the time, but became part of Poland when the war ended.

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Recently, a Pole and a German, acting through lawyers, told local authorities they had found an armoured train with valuables in a disused tunnel and demanded a financial reward.

Deputy Culture Minister Piotr Zuchowski told reporters the lawyers had been informed the train was over 100 metres (109 yards) long and called it an “exceptional” discovery.

He said he was shown an image – albeit blurred – from a ground-penetrating radar that showed the shape of a train platform and cannons, and added he was “more than 99 per cent certain that this train exists.”

“We will be 100 per cent sure only when we find the train,” Zuchowski said.

Walbrzych regional authorities will conduct the search, using military explosives’ experts, in a procedure that will take “weeks,” he said.

A person who claimed he helped load the gold train in 1945 said in a “deathbed statement” the train is secured with explosives, Zuchowski said. The person, who was not identified, had also indicated the probable location of the train, he said.

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