Germany has returned several cultural artifacts looted during the Nazi occupation to Poland. These items include a medieval parchment manuscript from the 14th century, a gold ring with a diamond from the 16th century, and eleven miniature train models from the Warsaw Museum of Transport collection. The handover took place on the 35th anniversary of the German-Polish Neighbourhood Agreement of 1991. Germany also announced it would review further Polish restitution requests and continue cooperation in searching for Nazi-looted art. Additionally, both countries are offering 30,000 free Interrail
Bias read (Center): The article presents a factual account of cultural restitution without overtly favoring any political perspective. It includes direct quotes from officials and provides context about the historical agreement and symbolic gestures like the free tickets. There is no evident bias in language or framing
Why these scores (Factual 95 · Objective 98): The article provides specific details about the returned items, including a medieval manuscript, a gold ring, and train models, which align with the cross-source consensus. It also mentions the historical context and the political significance of the return, such as the 35th anniversary of the frien





