A DNA test is useless without a known relative to compare against. What’s missing is the soldier’s ID tag.įor months, Fremont has searched for clues as to the identity of the soldier, whose remains were found in March by workmen resurfacing a road. Laid out on a white sheet are the combatant’s near-complete skeleton, many of the bones blackened, and his leather boots, the laces tied tight. French forensic pathologist Bruno Fremont and forensic assistant Manu Robas work on the identification of the remains of an unknow soldier, killed during World War One, found during road construction work near the battlefield of Douaumont, during an interview with Reuters at Verdun hospital, eastern France, November 5, 2018.
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