Polish governor backtracks on Nazi 'gold train'

  • 01/09/2015
Busts of dictator Adolf Hitler are pictured at the media preview of the exhibition "Hilter und die Deutsche Volksgemeinschaft und Verbrechen" (Hitler and the German Nation and Crime) at the Deutsche Historisches Museum (German Historical Museum) in Berlin (Reuters)
Busts of dictator Adolf Hitler are pictured at the media preview of the exhibition "Hilter und die Deutsche Volksgemeinschaft und Verbrechen" (Hitler and the German Nation and Crime) at the Deutsche Historisches Museum (German Historical Museum) in Berlin (Reuters)

A regional governor in Poland says he has serious doubts about the alleged discovery of a Nazi gold train days after a deputy culture minister revealed he was "more than 99 percent sure" one had been found.

"There is no more proof for this alleged discovery than for other claims made over the years," Tomasz Smolarz, governor of the southwestern region of Lower Silesia, told reporters on Monday.

Two anonymous fortune hunters claim they have pinpointed the Nazi-era loot.

"It's impossible to claim that such a find actually exists at the location indicated based on the documents that have been submitted," Smolarz said, adding he had set up a special unit including historians and geologists to scrutinise the alleged discovery.

Global media have for days been abuzz with talk of trains full of jewels and gold stolen by the Nazis after the two men - a German and a Pole - claimed to have found an armoured train car buried near the city of Walbrzych.

On Friday, Polish Deputy Culture Minister Piotr Zuchowski said he had seen a convincing ground-penetrating radar image of the alleged Nazi train.

"I'm more than 99 per cent sure such a train exists, but the nature of its contents is unverifiable at the moment," Zuchowski told reporters, adding that he could make out platforms and cannons on the photo.

Smolarz said on Monday he had not seen any such image.

"The fact that this train is armoured suggests there could be valuable objects inside" including artworks, archival documents or treasures, Zuchowski added.

The World Jewish Congress has asked that any valuables found that once belonging to victims of the Holocaust should be returned to their owners or heirs.

Zuchowski said someone who had been involved in hiding the train, which is over 100 metres in length, had disclosed its location before dying.

Rumours of two special Nazi trains that disappeared in the spring of 1945 have been circulating for years, capturing the imagination of countless treasure-hunters.

The lore is fuelled by a massive network of secret underground tunnels near Walbrzych - including around the massive Ksiaz Castle - that Nazi Germany built and where legend has it the Third Reich stashed valuables.

AFP