Oman Daily Observer

54,000 evacuated on Christmas after Germany finds WW-II bomb

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BERLIN: An unwelcome Christmas surprise in southern Germany forced the evacuation of 54,000 people from their homes on Sunday after the discovery of a bomb dating from World War II, local authoritie­s said. It was a British bomb that was found in the city of Augsburg and led to the biggest mobilisati­on in Germany — around 900 police officers — since the war itself.

The 1.8-tonne explosive had been found on Tuesday during work at a constructi­on site in the centre of the Bavarian city, but authoritie­s planned to defuse the bomb around mid-day Sunday.

“Today I ask everyone concerned to leave the area, if possible by themselves,” said Augsburg mayor Kurt Gribi in a video message posted on the city’s Twitter account. Gribi also called for “each person to verify that their relatives, parents and friends have found places to stay outside the (security) zone... Look out for one another.”

The defusing could take up to five hours, according to the authoritie­s, who estimate that the evacuees will not be able to return home before the evening. Admittedly this was an unusual Christmas Day in Augsburg, a city spokesman told TV channel n24, adding that hopefully people would voluntaril­y leave their homes given the expected “force of the explosion” during the defusing of the bomb. More than 70 years after the end of the war, unexploded bombs are still found buried on German territory, vestiges of the intense bombing campaigns by the Allied forces against Nazi Germany. — AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? People wait in a fair hall during an evacuation on Sunday in Augsburg, southern Germany.
— AFP People wait in a fair hall during an evacuation on Sunday in Augsburg, southern Germany.

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