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Czech explosive experts safely detonate a rare World War II bomb at a major chemical plant

This photo released by the Police of the Czech Republic on Friday Aug. 30, 2024, shows a World War II bomb that was found last week at a major chemical plant near the city of Litvinov, northwestern Czech Republic. Czech explosive experts detonated the bomb where it was found. (Policie CR via AP) (Uncredited, Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

PRAGUE – Czech explosive experts detonated a World War II bomb on Friday at a major chemical plant in northwestern Czech Republic where it was found last week, authorities said.

Besides a few broken windows, the controlled explosion didn’t immediately seem to cause serious damage, police said in a statement. The plant near the city of Litvinov belongs to Polish oil company PKN Orlen.

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The bomb was found during construction work last week on Aug. 21 away from a building. Experts decided not to transport the 250-kilogram (550-pound) bomb to a safer place to dispose of it, because it contained a chemical mechanism designed to delay the explosion, a rare discovery in the country.

They covered the bomb with hundreds of sandbags before the explosion. A nearby road was closed and trams halted operations before the explosion at about noon (1000 GMT). Police sealed off an area 2 kilometers (more than a mile) from the site of the explosion.

The refinery, which was located on Czechoslovak territory occupied by Nazi Germany during the war, was producing fuel for Nazi troops. It was repeatedly targeted by Britain’s Royal Air Force.


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