1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites

WWII bomb forces evacuation

November 3, 2013

The discovery of a huge bomb left over from World War II in the west German city of Dortmund has prompted a mass evacuation. More than 20,000 people had to leave their homes.

https://p.dw.com/p/1AAs5
Bomb of the type found in Dortmund. Photo: Stadt Dortmund/dpa
Image: picture-alliance/dpa

Some 1,200 personnel from the city administration, police, fire brigade and aid organizations helped organize the evacuation on Sunday morning. A hospital and several aged care facilities were also forced to evacuate.

The zoo and several leisure parks provided concessions or free admission to the evacuees, and special accommodation was set up at the Westfalenhallen congress center.

Defusing the bomb took until late-afternoon local time. The process was halted briefly when two wheelchair-bound residents alerted officials they were still inside their apartments within the evacuation zone.

The 1.8-ton (4,000-pound) bomb was discovered in the Dortmund district of Hombruch by analyzing old aerial photographs, while looking for unexploded ordnance dropped by Allied aircraft over the industrial Ruhr region in which Dortmund is situated.

Unexploded bombs from World War II are regularly discovered in Germany, but this one is of unusually large explosive power, prompting authorities to extend the safety zone around the site to a 1.5-kilometer (.93-mile) radius.

A similar bomb find in the city of Koblenz in December 2011 forced the evacuation of some 45,000 people.

tj,dr/rc (dpa, AP)