Human remains found on board British aircraft shot down during WW2

The remains of British airmen shot down by the Nazis over Dutch waters may have been discovered in a massive rescue operation.

Report informs via The Guardian that with the help of a €15m national plane-wreck rescue fund, the Dutch have started to sift the wreckage of the British Lancaster ED603, which never returned from a mass bombing mission targeting Bochum in Germany on 13 June 1943. Instead this “Pathfinder”, that gave the lead to 503 bombers, was tracked as it headed home. It was shot down and crashed in the blue Dutch waters of the IJsselmeer with seven men aboard.

The bodies of four men washed up within days and were eventually buried in the Netherlands but, to this day, three are officially registered as missing: 27-year-old flight engineer Arthur Smart; 23-year-old mid-upper gunner Charles Sprack; and 21-year-old wireless operator Raymond Moore.

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