Mystery as missing mum, 26, is found murdered inside a Nazi bunker four days after she vanished
A MISSING mum has been found murdered in a Nazi bunker in a forest in eastern Germany.
Bianca S., 26, is feared to have been abducted and stabbed after she was last seen cycling away from a train station in Oranienburg last Thursday.
A friend who saw her at noon said she was on the way to see a doctor, but she then failed to show up to a team meeting at work at 2pm.
She also failed to collect her five-year-old son from daycare that afternoon, sparking appeals from worried authorities.
Then at 10pm on Monday, workmen found her body in a corridor at a former SS radio station at Karo Ass, four miles outside the town.
The moss-covered bunker dating from World War 2 is hidden deep in the forest, and is accessed through a muddy trench under a gap in the concrete wall.
Early investigations indicate the victim was stabbed, according to reports.
A police spokesman told Bild: "The situation and the externally visible injuries speak for a homicide."
Detectives later ruled out rape, according to RTL, and the motive remains a mystery.
Yesterday police found Bianca's bicycle in undergrowth less than 100 yards from the bunker.
"We have no direct evidence of another crime scene," said a spokesman for the public prosecutor's office.
MANHUNT
Investigators said it is likely Bianca was killed in or near the bunker.
Police asked the public to report any strange goings-on nearby.
The force said: "We have not yet been able to identify a suspect."
Bianca's mother stepped in to collect her grandson from daycare after the young mum failed to arrive as usual at 4pm on Thursday.
Her family said her disappearance was out of character and she was officially declared missing on Saturday.
Police used 14 sniffer dogs to scour the area but found no trace until the grisly discovery in the bunker.
Oranienburg, around 22 miles north of Berlin, became the centre of the Nazis' nuclear project with a uranium enrichment facility nearby.
The US air force destroyed the nuclear plant in 1945 to stop it falling into Stalin's hands.
Oranienburg also housed arms and aircraft factories and one of the first concentration camps, which was set up in 1933.
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