WWII bomb blast in Thailand kills seven, injures 19: officials

WWII bomb blast in Thailand kills seven, injures 19: officials

BANGKOK - Agence France-Presse
At least seven people died and 19 others were injured April 2 when a massive World War II bomb exploded at a scrap metal warehouse in Bangkok as workers tried to cut it open, officials said.        

The 225-kilogram (500-pound) shell was found at a construction site by builders who then sold it to a suburban scrap metal merchant believing the bomb had 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"The workers at the warehouse thought the bomb was no longer active so they used a metal cutter to cut into it causing the explosion," said local police commander Virasak Foythong, adding the ordnance was probably left over from the war era.
      
"Seven are now confirmed dead and 19 injured," the city's Erawan emergency center said, updating the toll. It reported that five people were killed at the scene.
      
Confirming the number of deaths, a police explosives expert said the blast created a large crater and damaged homes within a 500-meter (1,640-feet) radius.
      
"It was [a] 500 pound bomb dropped from the air during World War II," Colonel Kamthorn Ouicharoen, of the police bomb disposal unit, told AFP after visiting the scene.
      
Television footage showed debris and twisted metal at the destroyed workshop, as thick smoke choked the sky, while local reports said dozens of nearby homes were also damaged by the blast.
      
The allies conducted bombing raids on the Thai capital in retaliation of the kingdom joining the Japanese war effort in Southeast Asia.