World War II bomb defused in Germany after 18,500 evacuated

Authored by straitstimes.com and submitted by green_flash

FRANKFURT (AFP) - A German bomb disposal team on Sunday (Aug 26) successfully defused an unexploded World War II bomb that had forced the evacuation of 18,500 people in the city of Ludwigshafen.

The 500kg aerial bomb, thought to have been dropped by American forces, was discovered during construction work earlier in the week.

"Good news: the bomb has been defused! Citizens may return to their homes," the city of Ludwigshafen said on its official Twitter feed.

It also posted a picture of the freshly unearthed, corroded bomb, strapped to a pallet before being removed from the area.

The authorities in the western city had ordered all those living within a 1km radius of the bomb site to leave their homes from 8am (0600 GMT) as a precaution ahead of the defusing operation.

It took the bomb squad just over an hour to complete the delicate task, and the all-clear was given shortly after 2pm.

More than 70 years after the end of World War II, Germany remains littered with unexploded ordnance, a legacy of the intense Allied bombing campaign against Nazi Germany.

In the biggest post-war evacuation to date, some 60,000 Frankfurt residents were evacuated last year so that an unexploded 1.8 tonne British bomb dubbed the "blockbuster" could be defused.

In April, thousands had to clear an area around Berlin's central railway station after another British bomb was discovered on a building site.

Unexploded munitions have also complicated the work of firefighters this summer, with forest fires sparked by a spell of hot, dry weather setting off long-buried ordnance, causing small explosions on several occasions.

x31b on August 27th, 2018 at 01:00 UTC »

There is a WW II ship sunk in the Thames Estuary with 1,400tons of TNT in bombs aboard. They consider it too dangerous to move.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SS_Richard_Montgomery

Engineer1822 on August 27th, 2018 at 00:35 UTC »

So a regular Sunday?

DoritosAndChill on August 26th, 2018 at 22:12 UTC »

Mind blowing when you think about how it gets dropped from high altitude and doesn’t explode upon impact.