WORLD / EUROPE
Frankfurt center, ECB cleared to defuse WWII bomb
Published: Jul 07, 2019 06:23 PM
Thousands of residents in Frankfurt were evacuated on Sunday to allow German explosives experts to defuse a large unexploded World War II bomb found close to the European Central Bank (ECB) headquarters.

The ECB building has been evacuated along with residential areas that are home to some 16,000 people within a roughly one-kilometer radius of the 500-kilogram bomb.

A bank spokeswoman said that "we have made arrangements for our employees to be able to work from other locations if necessary," reported the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung daily.

The US fragmentation bomb with two detonators was found on June 25 during construction work in the center of Germany's banking capital Frankfurt.

The ordnance clearance service determined that it spelled no immediate danger and scheduled the defusal operation for Sunday.

The evacuation zone stretches across both banks of the Main River and will force the suspension of several train services. No one will be allowed inside the area until the end of the operation.

Authorities want to avoid delays that marred an even bigger evacuation in September 2017 when 60,000 people had to leave their homes, hotel rooms and hospital wards following the discovery of a monster bomb filled with 1.4 tons of explosives.

This time around, all those affected will be given free ­entry for the day to the city's museums - a courtesy also to be extended to the emergency personnel who will receive vouchers to visit on other days.

Nearly 75 years after the end of World War II, Germany is still littered with bombs and other unexploded ordnance.

Experts say at least 10 percent of the millions of bombs dropped on Germany during the conflict did not explode.

A week ago a buried bomb exploded in a field in western Germany, leaving a huge crater but causing no injuries.

And earlier this month, a 100-kilogram US bomb was ­defused near central Berlin's Alexanderplatz after the evacuation of around 3,000 people.

Around 2,000 dud bombs are believed to remain buried in Frankfurt which was heavily bombed by American and British forces in the last years of the war.


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