WWII bomb defused in Dresden after mass evacuation, fire

Nearly 9,000 people evacuated, including occupants of hospital and two elderly care homes, after corroded aerial bomb discovered during construction work

This picture taken during the night of May 23, 2018, shows a burning spot (C) on the site in Dresden, eastern Germany, where a World War II bomb was found and defused. (AFP PHOTO / dpa / Marco Klinger / Germany OUT)
This picture taken during the night of May 23, 2018, shows a burning spot (C) on the site in Dresden, eastern Germany, where a World War II bomb was found and defused. (AFP PHOTO / dpa / Marco Klinger / Germany OUT)

DRESDEN, Germany — A German bomb disposal team Thursday gave the all-clear after defusing an unexploded World War II bomb that forced a mass evacuation in the city of Dresden.

The operation had been complicated by a fire sparked when specialists blasted off the bomb’s fuse. This forced them to stay clear of the site for hours until the flames were extinguished.

By Thursday afternoon, an armored vehicle was able to clear the smoldering rubble and it was confirmed that the 250-kilogram (550-pound) dud bomb had been safely deactivated.

Police then allowed the almost 9,000 evacuees to return to their homes in a district near Dresden’s central railway station, including two elderly care homes and a hospital.

Evacuees at an emergency shelter in Dresden, eastern Germany, wait while a disposal squad diffuses a World War II bomb, May 24, 2018. (AFP PHOTO / dpa / Sebastian Kahnert / Germany OUT)

The corroded aerial bomb had been discovered during construction work Tuesday in the Saxony state capital on the Elbe river which was heavily bombed toward the end of the Second World War.

A police bomb squad managed to blast away the detonator late Wednesday, but the operation set ablaze materials that had been placed nearby to help absorb blast waves from a potentially larger detonation.

No one was injured during the defusal operation in the cordoned-off area.

More than 70 years after the end of the war, unexploded bombs are regularly found in Germany, a potentially deadly legacy of the intense Allied bombing campaign against Nazi Germany.

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