📰 Full Story
Emergency services in Toulouse, France, partially evacuated the Rangueil hospital in the early hours of Feb. 1 after surgeons discovered an unexploded World War I artillery shell lodged in the rectum of a 24‑year‑old man.
The patient was admitted with severe pain and underwent emergency surgery, during which medical staff identified the roughly 20cm, brass-and-copper shell believed to date from 1918.
Explosive ordnance disposal teams and the fire brigade were called to the scene; the device was declared safe and removed with no reported detonations or further injuries.
Local prosecutors say the man — who remains under medical care and is to be questioned by police — may face legal action over possession of prohibited “category A” munitions.
Authorities reiterated warnings about the hazards of handling historical munitions, noting unexploded ordnance from the Western Front is still regularly found across parts of France and Belgium.
🔗 Based On
🤝 Social Media Insights
Social Summary
Local reporting confirms the Feb. 1 Rangueil hospital evacuation. This is part of a recurring pattern: century‑old munitions still surface and can force ER evacuations, but legal and insurance claims circulating about sex‑toy legality or automatic denial of coverage are oversimplified and unreliable.














)






💬 Commentary