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Over 50,000 evacuated from Italian city as Second World War bomb defused

It was country’s biggest peacetime evacuation, according to local news

Zoe Tidman
Sunday 15 December 2019 09:32 EST
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A Second World War bomb was defused and moved from the Italian city of Brindisi
A Second World War bomb was defused and moved from the Italian city of Brindisi (Brindisi Oggi / Facebook)

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Over 50,000 people were evacuated from an Italian city so experts could defuse a bomb dating back to Second World War, authorities have said.

Residents in Brindisi on the country’s southern coast were forced to vacate a “red zone” near where the wartime device was found.

The operation – which vacated 60 per cent of the Puglia city’s population – was the biggest peacetime evacuation in Italy, according to the daily newspaper Il Corriere della Sera.

Around 54,000 people were evacuated in total during Sunday morning, authorities said.

Those moved included prison inmates, who were transferred to another facility in a neighbouring city, according to local news reports.

Authorities said the bomb would first be deactivated and then transported to a nearby quarry, where it will be made to explode, according to local news.

The British bomb, believed to have been dropped on the city in 1941, contains 40kg of dynamite, authorities said.

It was found by chance last month during refurbishment works at a cinema.

Residents were told they could return to their houses at 1pm local time.

Other Italian cities have been evacuated in recent months after bombs were discovered during construction work.

Thousands of citizens were evacuated from Turin in north Italy as bomb disposal experts defused a Second World War device, which was also British, in early December.

In October, another bomb was defused in the city centre of Bolzano after being found on a construction site.

Additional reporting by Reuters

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