The Disappeared: Remains exhumed from Monaghan cemetery
Wave Trauma
Joe Lynskey disappeared in 1972
The body set up to find the remains of the Disappeared has carried out an exhumation at a cemetery in County Monaghan.
The Independent Commission for the Location of Victims’ Remains (ICLVR) said it received information about suspicious activity during the 1970s at a grave in Annyalla cemetery.
"Both the timeframe and the location coincide with the disappearance of Joe Lynskey in 1972," an ICLVR statement said.
Mr Lynskey was abducted and murdered by the IRA in 1972.
The Disappeared are those who were abducted, murdered and secretly buried during The Troubles in Northern Ireland.
Jon Hill, the lead investigator with the ICLVR, said Mr Lynskey's family were "cautiously optimistic".
"But you have to remember they have been down this road before," he told BBC Radio Ulster's Good Morning Ulster programme.
"Sadly this happened back in 2010 when we were undertaking a search for Joe Lynskey and we actually recovered the remains of Seamus Wright and Kevin McKee.
"They are cautious, as are we, and it is the right way to be, but of course they are hopeful."
'Very nervous'
Maria Lynskey says she is "very optimistic" about the exhumation
Speaking to BBC Radio Ulster's Talkback programme, Mr Lynskey's niece Maria said she was "very nervous" but also "very optimistic" about the exhumation.
"These are long journeys for us, for all the families of the Disappeared that have had to go through this," Ms Lynskey said.
"I’ve been disappointed before so I’m hoping I’m not disappointed again."
Ms Lynskey said her father had been dead for 30 years and he would have loved to have known where his brother was.
"When people give information, they don’t realise how humble and how grateful we are that they have given information," she said.
"Whoever owns this grave, I thank them from the bottom of my heart that this has come out and hopefully it’s Joe, I hope to god it’s Joe and we can bring him home," she added.
"But we still have four more bodies, three men and one young woman that we need to bring home, too."
Describing her uncle, Ms Lynskey said: "He was quiet, he was quite gentle and shy in a way. He was the only uncle we had."
The exhumation at Annyalla cemetery took place on Tuesday and continued throughout the day with a forensic anthropologist on behalf of the ICLVR, Mr Hill said.
The ICLVR said the formal process to establish the identity of all of the remains found in the grave has begun.
Mr Hill said that how long the process will take "really depends on what we have recovered and we won't know for some days whilst that is examined by the anthropologist".
"I will be guided by them and the scientists on how long it will take," he said.
"It will take as long as it needs to take."
Speaking to BBC News NI, Sinn Féin senior politician Pearse Doherty said the Lynskey family have "gone through a terrible injustice".
He said he hoped the remains are found of all the Disappeared.
Doherty called on anyone with information to come forward and give these families the right "that they should always have had, which is to bury their loved ones".
Posting on X, formerly Twitter, the WAVE Trauma Centre said their thoughts are with the Lynskey family as "they face a long wait".
"Our fervent hope is that Joe’s remains have now been recovered and he can be finally returned to his family and laid to rest in Milltown Cemetery in the family grave," the centre added.
The exhumation is being carried out at Annyalla cemetery
Who was Joe Lynskey?