China Daily

Bomb defused after 75,000 evacuated

- By ASSOCIATED PRESS in Thessaloni­ki, Greece

Authoritie­s in the northern Greek city of Thessaloni­ki evacuated an estimated 75,000 people on Sunday so army experts could defuse a 227-kilogram unexploded World War II bomb found under a gas station.

The evacuation started at 7 am. Police went house-tohouse ringing bells and knocking on doors to remind people living within a 1.9-kilometer radius, mostly in the western suburb of Kordelio, to leave their homes.

Michalis Papanos, resident

Bomb disposal experts started work at 11.30 am, 90 minutes later than planned, but defused the bomb in only 30 minutes, Central Macedonia governor Apostolos Tzizikosta­s announced.

The bomb was now going to be taken to an army firing range.

“The first phase of the bomb disposal has been a total success,” Tzizikosta­s announced. “There remains its removal from the site. Residents will still not be allowed in their homes, because the removal and transport contains dangers.”

Many people left the area in their cars, but some were bused to schools and sports halls elsewhere in the city.

“WeheardonT­Vthat,ifthe bomb explodes, it will be like a strong earthquake,” a worried Michalis Papanos, 71, told The Associated Press as he and his wife, Yiannoula, headed out of their home.

Alexander Bogdani and his wife, Anna Bokonozi, left on foot, pushing a stroller with their toddler daughter.

“They have warned us ... we are afraid for the child,” Bogdani said.

The city’s main bus station was shut down, trains in the area were halted and churches canceled their Sunday services. The city also booked a 175-room hotel where people with limited mobility and their escorts were taken on Saturday.

Among the evacuees were 450 refugees staying at a former factory, who bused to visit the city’s archaeolog­ical museum.

One resident says he recalls the day the bomb fell.

“The bombing was done by English and American planes on Sept. 17, 1944. It was Sunday lunchtime,” said Giorgos Gerasimou, 86, whose home is half a mile away from the bomb site.

He said the Allies were targeting local German rail facilities and he remembers the day clearly because one of his 10-year-old friends was killed in the bombing.

Nazi Germany occupied Greece from 1941 until October 1944.

We heard on TV that, if the bomb explodes, it will be like a strong earthquake.”

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