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Authorities on 19 April 2026 carried out a controlled detonation of a World War II-era bomb in Colombes, a north‑west suburb of Paris, after an earlier attempt to remove its detonator failed.
The device, discovered on 10 April during construction work on Rue des Champarons and measuring more than one metre excluding its tail, was covered in sand and placed in a reinforced pit before being destroyed.
Residents within a 450‑metre radius were ordered to evacuate by 07:00 local time; a wider zone up to about 1 kilometre required people to stay indoors.
Nearly 800 police officers enforced the evacuation and road closures, and reception centres were opened to assist those displaced, including vulnerable people needing medical support.
Bomb disposal experts carried out the blast at around 15:20, with the evacuation order lifted shortly after 16:00.
Footage showed rusted fragments at the bottom of a roughly two‑metre‑deep pit.
Officials noted the operation was “risky” and required high preparation.
Unexploded wartime ordnance continues to be found across Europe — notably a large device near Paris’s Gare du Nord in 2025 — often disrupting construction and transport.








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