War claims victims long after the fighting stops. Three UXO clearance workers killed in Germany by WWII bomb.

June 2, 2010
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Firefighters inspect the area where a bomb exploded in Goettingen, Germany on Wednesday June 2, 2010. Police say three experts working to defuse a bomb dating back to World War II were killed when the device exploded, injuring six others. Goettingen police say residents from around the area where the bomb was found were still being evacuated when it detonated. (AP Photo/ddp/Eckehard Schulz) (Eckehard Schulz - AP

The Associated Press

Wednesday, June 2, 2010; 9:05 AM

BERLIN — Three experts working to defuse a bomb from World War II were killed when the device exploded, injuring six others, police said Wednesday.

Some 7,000 residents from around the area in the central German town of Goettingen, where the 1100-pound (500-kilogram) heavy bomb was found, were still being evacuated when it blew up late Tuesday.

Construction workers had found the 65-year-old explosive device about seven yards (meters) below the ground on an empty where the city is currently building a sport arena.

The three dead men, aged 38 to 55, were experienced in defusing bombs and it was not clear why it exploded, Goettingen Police President Robert Kruse said at a press conference Wednesday. He said two other experts were severely injured and four others were treated for shock.

City spokesman Detlef Johannson said team was still preparing to remove the detonator when the bomb exploded.

Unexploded bombs from Allied bombardments and World War I are found regularly in Germany. Only a few days before, another bomb was found in Goettingen was successfully defused.

Every German state has dozens of specialists trained to defuse old bombs, and accidents are rare. Hundreds of police and fire fighters are usually involved in helping evacuate people before experts attempt to defuse a bomb.

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