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Tricky WWII bomb defusal sparks fire in Dresden

A member of the Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) helps a colleague to get into a bomb suit to defuse a suspicious object after two bombs exploded at the city clock tower in the center of Hua Hin, Thailand, 12 August 2016. A series of bomb attacks in the resort city of Hua Hin killed at least two people and injured more than 20 people including foreign tourists. EPA/RUNGROJ YONGRIT

The German city of Dresden Thursday extended a mass evacuation sparked by the discovery of an unexploded World War II bomb after a failed defusal operation sparked a fire, police said.

“At the moment the danger level is quite high and an assessment of the situation is impossible,” local police said on Twitter about the bomb site near Dresden’s central railway station.

The fire near the 250-kilogramme (550-pound) dud explosive forced security services to extend the evacuation of almost 9,000 people, including residents of two elderly care homes and a hospital.

The corroded aerial bomb had been discovered during construction work Tuesday in the Saxony state capital, which was heavily bombed toward the end of 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.

Police said that “the situation is difficult and our specialists will only be able to return once the fire has gone out and the area has cooled down”.

Some 25 flights in and out of Dresden were scrapped Wednesday as authorities closed the air space near the bomb site, and more flights were cancelled Thursday.

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. DM

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