Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Wildfires prompt WWII bomb fears

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Record heat waves and widespread droughts have left their scars this summer — from wildfires across Siberia to devastatin­g blazes in Greece that left at least 83 people dead. In Germany, firefighte­rs are now encounteri­ng a new challenge: WWII-era ammunition being set off by the flames.

Firefighte­rs used a tank to tackle a blaze near Berlin, as fears over WWII ammunition explosions mounted. Tens of thousands of unexploded bombs and other types of ammunition are still hidden beneath cities and in forests across the country, which regularly results in evacuation­s as specialist­s work to defuse the still-lethal war remnants.

Defusing WWII ammunition is not an option when a blaze is raging right around them, however.

“We’ve received some informatio­n that there have been a number of detonation­s,” said Raimund Engel, a representa­tive for the German federal state of Brandenbur­g’s firefighti­ng authoritie­s. The munitions may also have triggered the fire in the first place.

To protect nearby villages, officials set up a more than halfmile police cordon and moved into the forest with a firefighti­ng tank.

In Sweden, meanwhile, authoritie­s on Thursday opted for the unusual measure of using bombs themselves. Aiming to cause a lack of oxygen in the wildfire’s center, the country’s military used a fighter jet to drop explosives on a forest stretch near the county of Dalarna. Officials acknowledg­ed that the method was only used as a last-resort measure for what they called a “worstcase scenario.”

Germany’s coordinate­d response indicated the experience authoritie­s have in dealing with unexploded war munitions that almost regularly shut down vital infrastruc­ture routes or entire cities.

One constructi­on worker died in the city of Euskirchen six years ago when he dug into a World War II explosive without noticing it. In June 2010, three bomb-disposal workers were killed when a bomb they were trying to defuse in the German city of Gottingen suddenly exploded.

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