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Anti-mafia police in southern Italy on Friday recovered two Vincent Van Gogh paintings stolen from a museum in Amsterdam in 2002 in a heist which the US Federal Bureau of Investigation ranked among the world's top ten art crimes.
Italian tax police retrieved the paintings wrapped in cloth at the home of Naples mafia or Camorra-linked drug trafficking suspect Raffaele Imperiale in Castellammare di Stabia, a pretty coastal town near Sorrento.
They were said to be in "relatively good condition".
Italian Premier Matteo Renzi praised Friday's operation in a tweet.
"Thanks to Italy's tax police for recovering these works by Van Gogh. I am proud of our security forces," Renzi said Police also seized assets worth 20 million euros from Imperiale and another Camorra-linked drug trafficking suspect Mario Cerrone in Friday's operation.
Imperiale, an alleged drug trafficking gang leader and Cerrone were arrested in January. They reportedly invested their proceeds in Dubai, Spain and the Isle of Man and are linked to the one of the biggest mafia clans in the Scampia area of northern Naples.
Cerrone is said to have tipped off investigators on the location of the two Van Gogh paintings.
Experts were baffled by the theft because guards had been on patrol and infra-red security systems were in place.
Neither work was insured at the time, and both were on loan to the Van Gogh museum from the Dutch government.
Van Gogh (1853-1890) is widely considered the greatest Dutch artist after Rembrandt.
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