Mystery continues to surround the disappearance of twin sisters who vanished from Aberdeen. Eliza and Henrietta Huszti, both 32, were last seen on Market Street at Victoria Bridge over the River Dee at around 2.12am on Tuesday, January 7.

Their last recorded movements saw them cross the bridge and turn right on to a footpath next the river heading towards Aberdeen Boat Club. Detectives yesterday confirmed that the siblings, who were wearing rucksacks, were seen at the same bridge at around 2.50pm the previous day, Monday January 6.

A major hunt was launched in the north east, with extensive searches being carried out of the river, with a police helicopter and dog branch also used. Officers have said there is nothing to suggest any criminality or suspicious circumstances, and they renewed their appeal for information.

What we know so far is there are is there are six key clues that could help police find the sisters who appeared to be leading perfectly normal lives in Aberdeen before their sudden disappearance.

(Image: PA)

Victoria Bridge

A key area of the search has centred around Victoria Bridge in Aberdeen. Police have poured through CCTV footage which shows the sisters walking over the River Dee at around 2.12am on Tuesday, January 7, with those clips forming part of the first appeal by Police Scotland.

On Friday, an update from the Force confirmed that the women were seen at the same bridge around 2.50pm the day before on January 6. Cops said that the pair spent around five minutes by the location and the river footpath but they “didn’t engage with anyone else.”

The statement from Police Scotland added: “After visiting the bridge, the sisters are then seen on CCTV making their way through the city centre, via the Union Square shopping centre, back to their flat in the Charlotte Street area of Aberdeen. There is nothing to indicate that Eliza or Henrietta left their flat again until shortly before they were last seen at the River Dee in the early hours.”

Police have been pouring through CCTV near to the Victoria Bridge
Police have been pouring through CCTV near to the Victoria Bridge (Image: PA)

Mobile Phone

It was widely reported that the landlady raised the alarm due to concern about Eliza and Henrietta. However, police have now clarified that she received a strange text message from Henrietta at 2.12am on January 7. At that point she was told that they would not be returning and then the phone was switched off.

Police Scotland officials said: “A text message was sent from Henrietta’s mobile phone to their landlady at 2.12am on Tuesday, 7 January, 2025, from the area of Victoria Bridge, indicating they would not be returning to the flat. The phone was then disconnected from the network and has not been active since.”

Superintendent David Howieson earlier said inquiries uncovered “circumstances” that led to additional concerns about the welfare of the sisters. All of their possessions were found in the home. He added: “There was an indication from the person from whom they rent a flat who had concerns that they left the flat and indicated they intended to move. So inquiries were carried out at the flat, and the circumstances that were found led to concern around their whereabouts, which was then important to the police.”

Henrietta (left) and Eliza Huszti (right) are still missing in Aberdeen
Henrietta (left) and Eliza Huszti (right) are still missing in Aberdeen (Image: Police Scotland)

Screams heard by residents

There have been reports that local residents heard screams around the time the pair are thought to have vanished.

One resident reportedly told the Scottish Sun: “Everyone is talking about this. It was pretty scary stuff. A woman screaming out in the darkness is going to raise some red flags. But it’s not entirely clear what the noises were. No one has been able to establish whether or not they are definitely connected to the girls.”

However despite these reports, detectives have stressed they don’t think anyone is involved in their disappearance and are not treating the circumstances as suspicious.

Family shock

Another bizarre twist in the story comes after the sister’s brother Joszef, revealed that the family were not aware of their decision to move out of their flat, despite he and his mother having spoken to them in the days and weeks prior to the disappearance. He added everything had seemed normal when they talked, and the two didn’t mention their decision to move out.

He told the BBC: “They wrote a message to their landlady that they wanted to immediately end their tenancy agreement. We didn’t have any information about that. So that’s the strange thing, that the girls didn’t tell us anything about that. They never mentioned any such plan.” He told the broadcaster the women had no financial difficulties and were saving up to buy their own property.

The Huszti sisters with brother Jozsef.
The Huszti sisters with brother Jozsef. (Image: Huszti family/BBC.)

The brother said another detail of which the family were not aware of was that Eliza and Henrietta only took one mobile phone the night they vanished. The family was not informed of the unusual move until it was announced by officers investigating the sisters’ movements.

The sisters’ family released a statement on Monday also appealing to anyone with any information to come forward. “This has been a very worrying and upsetting time for our family,” the statement read. “We are really worried about Eliza and Henrietta and all we want is for them to be found.”

The River Dee

Searches by police have continued around the River Dee with officers working on the main theory that the sisters entered the water. Detectives say they are keeping an open mind about what happened to the sisters, but they insist they have not found anything to suggest a third party was involved.

Mr Howieson said: “One of our theories has to be that they’ve entered the water for reasons unknown, and that’s why so much of our search activity is focused on the river, the river bank, and the harbour itself, but we’re not ruling out the fact that they may have left this area by means that we haven’t identified yet.”

He continued: “I don’t want to speculate on likelihood, we are open minded, we have a theory which involves them entering the water as a potential, but we can’t rule out that the timeline continues on from that, but we haven’t established that through enquiries.”

He added that during their investigation, police have not found anything that pointed towards “criminality or suspicious circumstances”. He said they have the support of police in their home country, who are liaising with the wider family.

Supt Howieson added that police remain “extremely concerned” about the sisters and urged anyone with information about their whereabouts to contact police. Anyone with information is asked to contact Police Scotland on 101, quoting incident number 0735 of Tuesday January 7.

A Police diver in the River Dee at Aberdeen harbour
A Police diver in the River Dee at Aberdeen harbour (Image: PA)

Sisters’ background

The two sisters arrived to the UK from Hungary six years ago and had been working in Aberdeen since then. Police have looked into their background but everything about it including their social life appeared to be perfectly normal, the Mirror reports.

Supt David Howieson told reporters: “Everything suggests that Eliza and Henrietta were well settled having been here many years. They were in secure and happy employment, they had a social life and friends here, and this is totally out of character, both in terms of the police enquiry and from what friends and family have said.”

Henrietta and Eliza Huszti were last seen on January
Henrietta and Eliza Huszti were last seen on January (Image: Police Scotland)

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