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Police said the bomb measured 140cm by 45cm. Photo: Handout

1,300 evacuated as Hong Kong police defuse unexploded 450kg American bomb at Wan Chai building site

Disposal squad sent in to examine find at construction site for Sha Tin-Central rail link

Hong Kong police were carrying out a major bomb disposal operation on Saturday afternoon involving the evacuation of 1,300 people after the discovery of a 450kg (1,000 lbs) wartime explosive at a Wan Chai construction site.

Senior bomb disposal officer Tony Chow Shek-kin said the ANM-65 device was a remnant from the second world war and had been dropped from the air by American bombers sometime between 1941 and 1945.

It contained about 225kg of explosives, which police expected to have defused by around midnight.

“The front detonator is damaged and would pose a danger if we were to move the bomb. So we have to dismantle it at the scene,” Chow said.

A police bomb squad was called in to examine the find. Photo: Edward Wong

“It could cause extensive damage. If the bomb explodes the force could affect the surrounding area within 200 metres, with fragments flying as far as 2,000 metres.”

The bomb was discovered at a building site for the Sha Tin-Central rail link, on Harbour Road and Tonnochy Road. A construction worker made a report to police at 7.40am on Saturday.

The large cylindrical device, 140cm long and 45cm in diameter, was unearthed 15 metres down in the soil.

Hong Kong’s ticking time bomb: unexploded wartime ordnance

Chow said his team would have to cut two holes in the bomb casing and burn the explosives inside in a process that would take about three hours. The area within a 400-metre radius was cleared while officers spent more than five hours on Saturday afternoon protecting the site using sandbags. The team planned to take any remaining explosives after the operation back to their base for further dismantling.

The bomb was found at a building site for the Sha Tin-Central rail link. Photo: Edward Wong

Maxim Kwok Mei-sum, police divisional commander for Wan Chai, said the force had evacuated about 1,300 people, mainly from the area facing the construction site.

“These included residents and workers from offices, the Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre and nearby hotels,” Kwok said. “Residents can be sheltered at the Wan Chai Activities Centre for the time being.”

The government’s Leisure and Cultural Services Department closed Harbour Road Sports Centre, where the city’s Fire Services Department was holding its annual sports day.

The northbound section of Tonnochy Road near the sports centre was closed to traffic, and other roads to north Wan Chai were to be closed after midnight, including small sections of Convention Avenue and Harbour Road, police said.

Police bomb disposal officers were called to the construction site in Wan Chai. Photo: Facebook
The Sha Tin-Central rail link, a 17km (10.5 miles) cross-harbour line costing HK$87.32 billion (US$11.17 billion), has become the city’s most expensive rail project ever.

It is scheduled to be completed in two stages, with the Tai Wai-Hung Hom section expected to be finished in the middle of 2019. A cross-harbour section to Admiralty is set for completion in 2021.

Saturday’s find was not the only recent unearthing of a bomb in Hong Kong.

In January last year, a 220kg unexploded US wartime explosive was found at a construction site in Pok Fu Lam. The airdropped bomb – model AN-64 – contained about 120kg of TNT explosives.

Police said at the time that officers believed it had also been dropped on Hong Kong during the second world war.

According to Chow, in 2014 another ANM-65 unexploded American bomb, weighing 900kg, was found at a construction site in Happy Valley.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: 1,300 led to safety in Wan Chai as bomb is defused
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