70,000 evacuated to defuse Second World War bomb
It is not yet known which side in the war dropped the bomb on Greek city
Greek authorities on Saturday began evacuating some 70,000 people in the city of Thessaloniki ahead of an operation to defuse a bomb from Second World War.
The bomb, containing nearly 250 kilograms of explosives, was unearthed in the northern city during road works last week and is due to be defused on Sunday.
More than 300 disabled people and bedbound patients were set to be the first evacuated yesterday using 20 ambulances, authorities from Greece’s second city said.
The full evacuation of all residents within a 1.9-kilometre radius of the bomb site, affecting three working-class neighbourhoods around west of the city-centre, is due to be completed before 0800 GMT on Sunday. Evacuation is “obligatory”, regional security chief Apostolos Tzitzikostas told reporters on Friday. The operation is unprecedented in Greece, “where a bomb of this size has never been found in an area this densely populated”, Tzitzikostas added.
Regional authorities said the entire operation would take up to eight hours, but local military spokesman Colonel Nikos Phanios was more cautious.
“We don’t know what we’re going to find,” he told AFP. Defusing the bomb and then moving it to a military shooting range “could take us up to two days”, he added. It is not yet known which side in the war dropped the bomb or when it fell, Phanios said.
A thousand police officers have been mobilised for the operation, with residents given several days’ warning via the media, leaflets and posts on social networks. Thessaloniki residents were facing disruption on the bus and train networks, with facilities set up to host evacuees in need of shelter.
Seven decades after the end of Second World War, unexploded bombs from the conflict are still being found around the globe. On January 23 dozens of people were evacuated after a bomb was found near a Hong Kong university.