Iceland gripped by rare murder case

Published Jan 24, 2017

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Reykjavik - Iceland has been gripped by a rare murder case after a young woman’s body was found on a beach. The parents of 20-year-old Birna Brjansdottir contacted the police on the morning of 15 January when their daughter hadn't arrived home from a night out. She was last seen leaving a music venue called Hurra in the Icelandic capital Reykjavik at 4 that Sunday morning.

Security cameras showed Ms Brjansdottir walking up Laugavegur, the main shopping street in Reykjavik, at around 5am and buying a kebab. Her mobile phone was later traced to Flatahraun in Hafnarfjorour, a town just south of the capital.

The complexity of the mission led officials to launch a missing person search with more manpower and equipment than ever before in Iceland, a country with one of the lowest murder rates in the world.

Eight days later, the young woman’s body was found on a beach. Police said in a statement on Sunday they were treating the case as murder, but added that it was “currently not possible to determine the cause of death”. Two sailors from Greenland, aged 25 and 30, were being held in connection with her disappearance. The search mission saw nearly 600 volunteers from Iceland's largest search and rescue team on the case to find the young woman.

Porsteinn Gunnarsson, spokesman for the Icelandic Association for Search and Rescue, which led the search, told The Independent: “It’s very unique for a young woman to disappear in the middle of Reykjavik. It's very unusual. People do not just disappear here."

The search mission began with a sniffer dog identifying a trail of the woman from the nightclub she had left. It led the team from the club up to Laugavegur, then it vanished. “The police identified that her mobile had been switched off in Hallgrimskirkja [the country's largest church] on Sunday morning. We had about 130 members of our search team there at this point,” said Mr Gunnarsson.

Ms Brjansdottir's shoes – a pair of Dr Martens – were found in the port of Hallgrimskirkja two days later. A member of the public had come across them and posted a photograph on Facebook in an appeal to find the owner. Police were quick to examine the footwear, and they were soon identified as those of the missing woman. Surveillance cameras showed a small red car, a Kia Rio, parked near to where the shoes were found at around 6.30am the day Ms Brjansdottir went missing – identical to a vehicle observed near the spot where she was last seen.

Traces of Brjansdottir’s blood were later said to be found in the red car that had been rented by the sailors. A call was then made to search and rescue volunteers across the country to carry out a major search across the region. At one stage, 750 volunteer members of the search team were searching the possible routes where the woman's potential abductor could have gone.

“It was very difficult land because it was a lot of rough land. We searched 100 metres on both sides of every road,” said Mr Gunnarsson. On Saturday, we saw the most manpower of any missing person search Iceland has ever seen, with 750 volunteer rescue workers out. We have calculated that our people searched 7 000 kilometres of rough landscape in two days. They found a lot of things, including six smartphones, but nothing that was connected to the case.”

But on Sunday afternoon, a week after the search began, one of the team's helicopters identified a body on a beach in Strandarkirkja, by the Selvogsviti lighthouse. The two sailors arrested in connection with the murder had set sail on a Greenlandic trawler, the Polar Nanoq, a few hours after Ms Brjansdottir went missing. Members of Iceland’s elite police force flew out to the ship by helicopter to question the crew, and the ship returned to Reykjavik and two sailors were taken into custody. The investigation is ongoing.

Iceland, a country of 330 000 people, has one of the world’s lowest crime rates, with a registered average of 1.8 murders per year since 2001. With just two recorded murders in the past three years, the tragedy has instilled a sense of shock and grief across the nation. 

Throughout the search, members of the public in Iceland shared social media posts to spread awareness, and tributes have been paid to Ms Brjánsdóttir and her family since the discovery of the body.

The Independent

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