72,000 people evacuated after WWII bomb found in Greece’s second largest city

Greek authorities have forced the evacuation of tens of thousands of people to safe places in the country’s second largest city of Thessaloniki after a bomb, dating from World War II, was discovered in the area.

The unwelcome guest, a 250-kilogram bomb, which was found some five meters below the ground during excavation works to expand a gas station’s underground tanks last week, made local authorities on Saturday to evacuate some 72,000 people living within a 1.9-kilometer radius of the bomb site to other places.

The planned evacuation, which began in the morning, affected three densely populated working-class districts around the western parts of the city center and is scheduled to be completed before 08:00 GMT on Sunday.

Regional security chief Apostolos Tzitzikostas said the unprecedented evacuation was “obligatory” for all the residents living within the evacuation zone, adding that they had been warned about the evacuation for the past several days via the media, leaflets and posts on social networks.

Some 20 ambulances were deployed to first evacuate over 300 disabled people and bedbound patients on Saturday, while about 1,000 police officers have been mobilized for the operation.

The country’s biggest peacetime evacuation has already largely crippled the bus and train networks in the city, Greece’s second major economic, industrial, commercial and political center.

The migration ministry said people living in a nearby refugee camp are also subject to the mass evacuation, without specifying the number affected.

It is not yet known which side of the war, the Allied or the Axis powers, dropped the bomb or when it fell.

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