Thai scrapyard workers accidentally detonated a suspected
World War II-era bomb Wednesday, killing seven and injuring 19 after attempting
to cut into it with a blowtorch.
The device was discovered at a construction site in Bangkok, and
moved to a scrapyard before workers tampered with it, in an attempt to break it
down into smaller parts.
Thai state news agency MCOT, quoting the the Bangkok Metropolitan
Administration's Erawan Medical Center, said six people died at the scene.
Another reportedly died before reaching the city's Mayo hospital.
The blast, in Bangkok's Lad Prao district, caused a ten foot-deep
(3 m) crater in the scrapyard's warehouse, and damaged neighboring properties.
The device was around 3 ft (1 m) long and weighed 500 lb (225 kg).
Local police commander Virasak Foythong told media that the scrap
workers believed the bomb to have been defused.
"The workers at the warehouse thought the bomb was no longer
active so they used a metal cutter to cut into it, causing the explosion."
Police said they suspected that the bomb was of World War II vintage
but its origin was not determined. Both British and American bombers attacked
Bangkok in 1944, while Thailand was an ally of Japan.
It is the second war-era ordnance to have been discovered in the
city in less than a week. A similar device was discovered last Saturday but was
safely deactivated. It is not uncommon for World War II bombs to be unearthed
in Asian cities, with a similar discovery made on a Hong Kong construction site
several weeks ago.
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