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Munitions in the news

Discussion in 'WWII Today' started by JCFalkenbergIII, Feb 2, 2008.

  1. JCFalkenbergIII

    JCFalkenbergIII Expert

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    WWII bomb seriously injures Japanese: officials

    Wed Jan 14, 1:33 am ET
    TOKYO (AFP) – A Japanese worker was severely injured Wednesday by a World War II bomb in Okinawa, which witnessed the Pacific war's fiercest battle nearly 64 years ago, officials said.
    Jun Kohagura, 25, was working on an underground water pipe on the subtropical island when the bomb went off, seriously injuring him in the face.
    "He was brought to hospital where he remains conscious. But his condition is not good as his injuries are so terrible that a piece of his flesh was found on the ground at the scene," fire department official Atsushi Kakazu said.
    The explosion was strong enough to shatter the glass of a nearby nursing home in the city of Itowan. A 72-year-old man was lightly injured but did not need hospital care, the fire department said.
    Leftover bombs are periodically found across Japan, even in highly developed Tokyo, but they rarely cause injuries.
    Okinawa was the bloodiest battle of the Pacific war, with US forces unleashing an 83-day air and amphibious assault dubbed by locals the "Typhoon of Steel." Some 190,000 Japanese died, half of them Okinawan civilians.
    An estimated 10,000 tonnes of unexploded munition were left in Okinawa after the war. About 4,500 tonnes remained by the time the United States returned Okinawa to Japan in 1972.
    Since then, Japan's armed forces have removed another 1,500 tonnes but it is expected to take 80 years or more to remove remaining dud bombs, Okinawa-based military spokesman Masatomo Takazato said.

    WWII bomb seriously injures Japanese: officials - Yahoo! News
     
  2. JCFalkenbergIII

    JCFalkenbergIII Expert

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    WWII grenade, mortar, found at Dunedin ALF

    Dunedin, Florida -- The Bomb Squad was called to Dunedin Wednesday afternoon after a man brought what was believed to be a World War II grenade and mortar round to the Sheriff's district office.
    John Freeborn, a caretaker and attorney for 102 year old Helen Garrett, discovered the military ordinance as he was helping her move from one unit at an assisted living facility to another, the sheriff's office said. Her late husband was a Navy veteran of World War II.
    Freeborn brought the ordinance to the Sheriff's North District Office on Louden Avenue. The items were placed in an open field and deputies kept local residents back until the Hillsborough County Bomb Squad arrived.
    The hand grenade and mortar round were determined to be stable. They were removed by the bomb squad for safe disposal.
    The sheriff's office used the occasion to issue an advisory to any citizen who comes across what appears to be an explosive material - war souvenirs or otherwise: do not handle it yourself, move a safe distance away and call 911 for assistance.

    WWII grenade, mortar, found at Dunedin ALF | 10connects.com | Tampa, St. Petersburg, Clearwater
     
  3. JCFalkenbergIII

    JCFalkenbergIII Expert

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    WWII Shell Found at Port Canaveral

    Thursday, January 22, 2009
    PORT CANAVERAL, Fla. -- Crews widening the turn basin for cruise ships at Port Canaveral uncovered a WWII era military explosive shell.
    The Brevard County bomb squad secured the north side of the port Thursday morning. Bulldozers uncovered the military shell.
    Crews said the shell was so rusted that they could not determine exactly what kind of shell it was or whether it contained any explosive materials.
    The bomb squad safely disposed of the shell.

    WWII Shell Found at Port Canaveral - News Story - WFTV Orlando
     
  4. JCFalkenbergIII

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    50 WWII bombs recovered in US embassy

    01/23/2009 | 11:18 PM

    MANILA, Philippines - At least 50 World War II vintage bombs were recovered from the United States Embassy premises in Manila Friday afternoon, a radio report said.

    Radio dzBB's Teresa Tavares reported that the embassy called the Manila Police District Explosives and Ordnance Division at 2 p.m. after construction workers discovered the bombs.

    The crew, which was using a backhoe at the time, uncovered the bombs at a construction site in a part of the embassy, which was believed to be a former armory.

    Police evacuated embassy personnel while they retrieved the bombs.
    They said they plan to return Saturday to inspect the site further. - GMANews.

    GMANews.TV - 50 WWII bombs recovered in US embassy - Nation - Official Website of GMA News and Public Affairs - Latest Philippine News - BETA
     
  5. JCFalkenbergIII

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    Japanese boys bring WWII bomb to school

    Posted 11 hours 3 minutes ago
    Two Japanese boys have brought a World War II bomb to class, flustering teachers on the island of Okinawa, which was the scene of the Pacific conflict's bloodiest battle.
    The two 12-year-old boys said they found the bomb last week in a yard near the school in Okinawa, where residents still unearth hundreds of dud explosives six decades after the war.
    "We immediately realised the blasting fuse had come off the bombshell," said Yoshiyasu Henzan, vice principal of Shonan elementary school.
    "We reported it to police through the local education board.
    "The children apparently thought the bomb would be good study material at school," he said, adding that the school has given a special class in peace studies for students.
    The US-made bombshell of about 30 centimetres in length was swiftly taken away by the Japanese bomb-disposal squad, the teacher said.
    Okinawa was the bloodiest battle of the Pacific war, with US forces unleashing an 83-day air and amphibious assault dubbed the "Typhoon of Steel" by locals.
    Some 190,000 Japanese died, half of them Okinawan civilians.
    Earlier this month, an Okinawan resident working on an underground water pipe was severely injured in the face when another World War II bomb went off.
    The bomb-disposal squad of the Japanese military unearthed 445 bombs in Okinawa in just two weeks after the explosion, the local Ryukyu Shimpo daily reported.
    -AFP

    Japanese boys bring WWII bomb to school - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
     
  6. JCFalkenbergIII

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    All-clear after WWII bomb scare


    [​IMG]

    The Royal Navy has given the all-clear for business to return to normal at Warrenpoint Harbour after a suspected WWII bomb was found on Friday morning.
    It was uncovered by a dredger at about 0900 GMT. It was put onto a barge and taken to a secluded part of the harbour for examination. Shipping in and out of Warrenpoint was halted. The Navy has said there is no longer a risk and the harbour is now getting back to normal.


    BBC NEWS | UK | Northern Ireland | All-clear after WWII bomb scare
     
  7. JCFalkenbergIII

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    WW II-vintage bomb found in Mariveles
    Manila Times
    7 February 2009 | 12:10 AM
    MARIVELES, Bataan: Another unexplo­ded vintage Japanese bomb used by warplanes during World War II was discovered Wednesday afternoon at the back portion of the Sto. Niño Elementary School in Biaan, Mariveles, Bataan.
    Senior Supt. Manuel Gaerlan, Bataan police director, said the latest find was an M57 general purpose bomb that when detonated can create a crater of more than 1,500 square-meter radius.
    A construction worker chanced upon the bomb while working in the school grounds and reported it to school authorities.
    [​IMG]With the big bomb were two other small ones. Gaerlan said that the bombs might have been used by warplanes of the Japanese Air Force in attacking Bataan shortly before the peninsula fell to Japanese invaders on April 9, 1942.
    On October 23, 2008, school chil­dren found a 250-lb bomb while gardening also at the back of the school.-- Ernie B. Esconde


    WW II-vintage bomb found in Mariveles  - Yehey! News
     
  8. JCFalkenbergIII

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    Live WWII-Era Grenade Found In Rochester Home

    Woman Discovers Older-Model Grenade In Late Husband's Belongings

    POSTED: 3:28 pm EST February 7, 2009
    UPDATED: 10:34 am EST February 8, 2009

    ROCHESTER, N.H. -- A Rochester woman got a scare when going through her late husband's things on Saturday.

    Kathleen Gee said she had no idea where her husband, Robert, got the grenade, and police said it created a close call for her.

    Police said she found a live hand grenade in a wooden case at about 8 a.m. Officers called in the bomb squad, which confirmed the grenade was live and took it away.

    Once the grenade was secure, an explosives expert determined it was indeed live with an interior fuse and detonator ready to go at any second.

    Robert Gee served in the military in the 1960s, stationed in Germany. Robert Gee died in November at age 67.

    Nashua police confirmed for WMUR News 9 that the device was a WWII-era pineapple grenade.

    No one was hurt.

    Live WWII-Era Grenade Found In Rochester Home - New Hampshire News Story - WMUR Manchester
     
  9. JCFalkenbergIII

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    World War II bomb found in southern Japan
    8 Feb 2009, 1605 hrs IST, AFP


    TOKYO: Flights were cancelled and residents evacuated while an unexploded bomb believed to have been dropped by US forces during World War II was made safe in southern Japan on Sunday.
    The 120-centimetre (48-inch) long rusty bomb was found in late January by workers at a construction site in Miyazaki prefecture.

    Japanese bomb disposal forces on Sunday safely removed the bomb after ordering 1,700 people out of their homes and delaying or cancelling more than a dozen flights into or out of Miyazaki airport.

    "Everything has returned to normal now as the bomb was safely removed," a Miyazaki city official said.

    Sixty years after the war ended unexploded bombs and shells are still occasionally found in Japan, particularly on the southern island of Okinawa, the site of an extremely bloody battle towards the end of World War II.

    Last month, a construction worker there was severely injured by a World War II bomb while working on an underground water pipe.

    World War II bomb found in southern Japan-Rest of World-World-The Times of India
     
  10. JCFalkenbergIII

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    Bomb scare device was WWII shell


    [​IMG] The city centre was evacuated after the discovery


    A device which caused Coventry city centre to be evacuated on Wednesday was an anti-aircraft shell thought to date back to World War II.
    It was found on a building site at the city's university in a container, along with highly inflammable gas cylinders.
    Students, swimmers at the sports centre in Fairfax Street and a choir at the cathedral were among the hundreds moved to safety.
    The university said it was lucky more people were not on the campus.
    The shell was found in Cox Street just before 1600 GMT and a 200m (220 yards) cordon was put in place.
    A team from the Explosive Ordnance Disposal took the shell away and destroyed it in a controlled explosion.
    Coventry University spokeswoman Ali Bushnell said it was lucky the incident happened in the late afternoon when most of the students were off campus.
    Last March part of the city was evacuated for the public's safety when a World War II bomb was found.
    A controlled explosion was carried out on the bomb which was discovered by builders working on the Belgrade Plaza development in Upper Well Street.
    BBC NEWS | UK | England | West Midlands | Bomb scare device was WWII shell
     
  11. JCFalkenbergIII

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    February 19, 2009

    Teens find live WWII explosive in Pasco woods

    LAND O’LAKES -– On Wednesday afternoon, two teenagers found something half-buried in the scrub near a junkyard. They dug it out of the dirt, picked it up and began carrying it home -- not realizing it was a live explosive from World War II.

    When the uncle saw what the boys were carrying, he told them to stop. Put it gently on the ground and walk away, he told them, according to the Pasco County Sheriff’s Office.
    Then he called 911. Deputies came out to the junkyard on State Road 52 just west of U.S. 41 and roped off the area until officials from MacDill Air Force Base arrived. If military weapons are found in the Tampa Bay area, MacDill’s explosive-ordnance-disposal squad is dispatched to investigate.
    What the boys found turned out to be a live World War II armor piercing round –- an explosive that one tank would fire at another, said Sgt. Patrice Clarke of MacDill Air Force Base. The officers took it back to the base and disposed of it there, Clarke said.
    According to the Pasco Sheriff’s Office report, the two teens, 19 and 17, were helping to check the property, Lee Johns' Junk Yard, to put in a bid to clean it for an upcoming real estate auction. The report says the bomb was found in a partly wooded area west of the junkyard, not inside it.

    Teens find live WWII explosive in Pasco woods
     
  12. JCFalkenbergIII

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    World War II bomb defused in Germany

    24 Feb 2009, 1550 hrs IST, AP

    BERLIN: German police say 15,000 residents were evacuated from their homes during the night in a northern town as experts defused a World War II-era bomb. Residents in part of Celle were evacuated on Monday evening after the bomb was found on the grounds of an industrial property.

    Explosives experts defused the 2,000-pound (900-kilogram) American bomb early Tuesday in an operation that lasted 35 minutes. People were then allowed back into their homes.

    Though World War II ended more than six decades ago, it is still relatively common for unexploded Allied bombs to be found in Germany.

    World War II bomb defused in Germany-Europe-World-The Times of India
     
  13. JCFalkenbergIII

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    Corps Finds Another World War II Era Explosive

    Thursday, February 26, 2009
    ORANGE COUNTY, Fla. -- Crews have discovered another World War II era explosive device near Odyssey Middle School Thursday. The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers announced that a 37mm high explosive projectile has been recovered on the former Pinecastle jeep range site, a formerly used defense site in Orlando.
    Over the past year, a number of old bombs have been found and detonated on land that used to be the old Pinecastle bombing range.
    Engineers said the projectile was recovered in the Orange County landfill during the Army Corps’ ongoing investigation. Removal by detonation, similar to demolitions that have taken place in the past several months, will occur Thursday afternoon.
    Engineering controls will be used to ensure safety and limit the noise and debris from the blast. The removal action poses no danger to people in the area.
    Officials said safety has always been the Corps’ top priority. The Army Corps said that should anyone encounter or suspect they have encountered munitions, it is vitally important that they follow the 3 simple steps of explosives safety.
    They are to recognize that the item may be dangerous, retreat and do not touch it and report its location to the local sheriff’s office immediately. The current investigation, officials said, is taking place to characterize the nature and extent of potential contamination remaining from military activities and to determine further cleanup actions, if warranted.

    Corps Finds Another World War II Era Explosive - News Story - WFTV Orlando
     
  14. JCFalkenbergIII

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    Unexploded WWII bomb removed from Sefton Park lake Mar 2 2009


    by Gary Stewart, Liverpool Daily Post

    [​IMG]
    AN UNEXPLODED WWII bomb forced police to cordon off Sefton Park last night after it had lain hidden underwater for nearly 70 years.
    Drainage work at the park had revealed the silt of the lake bed and it was there that a couple out walking in the park spotted the bomb just before 6pm on Sunday.
    Six police vehicles arrived at the Aigburth Drive entrance of the park and officers set up a 100m blast cordon around the lake and taped off the gates to the public.
    Military bomb experts from the Explosive Ordnance Department (EOD) in Chester arrived at about 8pm and within five minutes had taken the device, probably a German bomb, away while crowds of passers-by looked on.
    Lorna Lacey, from Aigburth, was walking her Yorkshire Terrier Dinky with sons Josh and Aaron. She said: “We were just out walking in Sefton Park.

    “Two eagle-eyed people were there looking in the lake and saying there was a bomb in there. It was a man and a lady and they were saying they had seen the same type of bomb in a museum in Wales and that they thought the pin was still in it.

    “They called two police officers and they all had a good look at it and then decided it was a bomb and then they called about 10 more.

    “Then they made everyone go back to a safe distance.

    “It should have exploded on impact, but it must have got stuck in the silt instead.

    “I was really impressed with the couple who spotted the bomb and even more impressed they recognised it as the same bomb they had seen in a museum.”

    Insp Mike Jarman said: “It was an unexploded ordnance that was stable enough to be transported. The EOD have taken it away and they’re going to dispose of it themselves.

    “They said they couldn’t do anything with it here and that they’d dealt with this type of device before.

    “Because it was a small device and it was in the middle of the lake, we didn’t feel the need to evacuate anybody.

    “Now everything is open again.”

    The May Blitz of 1941 saw 681 German planes drop 870 tonnes of high explosives and over 112,000 incendiaries on Liverpool, killing over 1,700 people and making around 76,000 homeless.​
    icLiverpool - Unexploded WWII bomb removed from Sefton Park lake
     
  15. JCFalkenbergIII

    JCFalkenbergIII Expert

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    Unexploded WWII bomb removed from Sefton Park lake Mar 2 2009


    by Gary Stewart, Liverpool Daily Post

    [​IMG]
    AN UNEXPLODED WWII bomb forced police to cordon off Sefton Park last night after it had lain hidden underwater for nearly 70 years.
    Drainage work at the park had revealed the silt of the lake bed and it was there that a couple out walking in the park spotted the bomb just before 6pm on Sunday.
    Six police vehicles arrived at the Aigburth Drive entrance of the park and officers set up a 100m blast cordon around the lake and taped off the gates to the public.
    Military bomb experts from the Explosive Ordnance Department (EOD) in Chester arrived at about 8pm and within five minutes had taken the device, probably a German bomb, away while crowds of passers-by looked on.
    Lorna Lacey, from Aigburth, was walking her Yorkshire Terrier Dinky with sons Josh and Aaron. She said: “We were just out walking in Sefton Park.

    “Two eagle-eyed people were there looking in the lake and saying there was a bomb in there. It was a man and a lady and they were saying they had seen the same type of bomb in a museum in Wales and that they thought the pin was still in it.

    “They called two police officers and they all had a good look at it and then decided it was a bomb and then they called about 10 more.

    “Then they made everyone go back to a safe distance.

    “It should have exploded on impact, but it must have got stuck in the silt instead.

    “I was really impressed with the couple who spotted the bomb and even more impressed they recognised it as the same bomb they had seen in a museum.”

    Insp Mike Jarman said: “It was an unexploded ordnance that was stable enough to be transported. The EOD have taken it away and they’re going to dispose of it themselves.

    “They said they couldn’t do anything with it here and that they’d dealt with this type of device before.

    “Because it was a small device and it was in the middle of the lake, we didn’t feel the need to evacuate anybody.

    “Now everything is open again.”

    The May Blitz of 1941 saw 681 German planes drop 870 tonnes of high explosives and over 112,000 incendiaries on Liverpool, killing over 1,700 people and making around 76,000 homeless.​
    icLiverpool - Unexploded WWII bomb removed from Sefton Park lake
     
  16. JCFalkenbergIII

    JCFalkenbergIII Expert

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    Fisherman’s dud idea leads cops to 8 more WWII bombs

    By FARIK ZOLKEPLI


    JOHOR BARU: A fisherman who found a World War II bomb buried near his house decided to use it as an anchor for his boat because it was heavy and convenient.
    He also thought that it was a dud as the bomb was an old one.
    A policeman who stopped to chat with him on Thursday evening noticed the bomb and suspected something amiss despite the fisherman assuring him that it was a dud as he had been using the bomb as an anchor for some time.
    Policemen from the Gelang Patah station then alerted the bomb squad which rushed to Kampung Sungai Melayu to check out the bomb, which was about the size of a fire extinguisher.
    It is learnt that besides the “anchor”, police also recovered eight similar bombs in the village.
    Nusajaya OCPD Supt Abdul Aziz Ahmad said the other bombs were discovered behind a restaurant in the village.
    “We have handed over the bombs to the bomb squad to be destroyed,” he said yesterday.
    He advised members of the public to notify the police as soon as possible if they came across any bomb.
    “Never ever use it as a decoration or sell it as scrap metal because some bombs can still be active,” he said, reminding the public of the incident in which an old mortar exploded in Ulu Tiram last Friday.
    The explosion at a sawmill killed Zaidi Jaafar, 35, and Indonesian Rustam Ali, 39, while seriously injuring Jamilah Ismail, 35.

    Fisherman’s dud idea leads cops to 8 more WWII bombs
     
  17. JCFalkenbergIII

    JCFalkenbergIII Expert

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    Another one about the fisherman
    FISHERMAN FOUND USING WWII BOMB AS ANCHOR

    By Frank Julian Martin Bernama - Saturday, March 7

    JOHOR BAHARU, March 6 (Bernama) -- Some may use heavy metals but a fisherman here had been using an active World War II bomb as an anchor for the last couple of months.

    The police found it out only yesterday when a patrol from the Gelang Patah station saw the 160mm relic being used to keep a boat in place at the Kampung Sungai Melayu jetty at 5pm.
    After some questioning, the police combed the village and found eight other active bombs believed dropped during the 1940s war.
    "The bombs about the size of a small fire extinguisher were found behind a restaurant in the village,” said Nusajaya OCPD Supt Abdul Aziz Ahmad.
    They were later handed over to the bomb squad to have them destroyed, he said when contacted here today.
    He advised the public who might have discovered objects that resemble bombs to immediately notify the police.
    "Unless the bombs are destroyed, they are considered still active and very dangerous," he said citing an incident in Ulu Tiram on Feb 27 were two men died and a woman sustained serious injury after they knocked on an old bomb they thought was scrap iron an open ground beside a sawmill.
    -- BERNAMA

    http://malaysia.news.yahoo.com/bnm/20090306/tts-police-bombs-993ba14.html
     
  18. JCFalkenbergIII

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    WWII trigger switches found in Haddonfield home



    March 10, 2009
    HADDONFIELD - The county bomb squad was called to a home in the Tavistock Country Club this morning when cleaners found what they thought were World War II explosive ordinances.
    [​IMG]



    The bomb squad arrived to the home on Lane of Acres Road at about 9:45 a.m. and quickly determined the ordinances were two trigger switches for explosive devices, police said.

    The switches were not attached to a fuse or any type of explosive device, said Patrolman Chris Kusofsky of the Haddonfield Police Department.

    Kusofsky said it was believed the home’s prior owner was a World War II veteran. The home was being cleaned for an auction sale when workers contacted police after seeing the old switches.

    Police said they tried to inform residents on either side of the home but determined no one was at home.

    “It ended the best way it could end - with no one being hurt,” Kusofsky said.

    WWII trigger switches found in Haddonfield home | CourierPostOnline.com | Courier-Post
     
  19. White Flight

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    Contractor to clean up unexploded WWII munitions
    Associated Press

    A federal contractor plans to begin searching next month for unexploded munitions thought to be spread across 14,000 acres of East Texas. That now-privately owned land was once part of a World War II infantry training center called Camp Fannin.

    Officials say the cleanup by Zapata Inc. could find small-arms ammunition, mines, grenades, rockets and mortars - all used when Camp Fannin was an active military facility from 1943 to 1946. The camp was returned to private landowners when it was deemed unnecessary after World War II, leaving unexploded ordnance across the area. Because of its closeness to homes and its easy accessibility, a 2001 Army Corps of Engineers study ranked the former camp at the top on a scale of one to five for dangerous former military sites.

    Among items that have turned up at the site over the years have been bazooka rounds, mortar shells, hand grenades, dynamite and various types of machine gun and rifle ammunition.

    Contractor to clean up unexploded WWII munitions | The Journal Gazette
     
  20. White Flight

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    An apparent dummy training bomb was found under the driveway at my nephews home in Farmersville Texas, RE: Post 54. His brother recently received and granted a request to search his property for munitions on what was once part of Camp Fannin, RE: Post 179.
     

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