An American bomb from WWII explodes at a Japanese airport, leaving a crater on the taxiway
UNB
Publish: 04 Oct 2024, 07:53 AM
TOKYO,
Oct 03 (AP/UNB) - An unexploded U.S. bomb from World War II that had been
buried at a Japanese airport exploded Wednesday, causing a large crater in a
taxiway and the cancellation of more than 80 flights, Japanese officials said.
No one was hurt, and
there were no aircraft nearby when the bomb exploded at Miyazaki Airport in
southwestern Japan, Land and Transport Ministry officials said.
An investigation by the
Self-Defense Forces and police confirmed the explosion was caused by a
500-pound U.S. bomb and there was no further danger. Officials were determining
what caused its sudden detonation.
A video recorded by a
nearby aviation school showed the blast spewing pieces of asphalt into the air
like a fountain. Videos broadcast on Japanese television showed a crater in the
taxiway reportedly about 7 meters (yards) in diameter and 1 meter (3 feet)
deep.
Chief Cabinet Secretary
Yoshimasa Hayashi said more than 80 flights had been canceled at the airport as
of midafternoon Wednesday.
The airport said the
taxiway damage was repaired overnight and flights resumed Thursday morning.
Miyazaki Airport was
built in 1943 as a former Imperial Japanese Navy flight training field from
which some pilots took off on suicide attack missions.
A number of unexploded
bombs dropped by the U.S. military during World War II have been unearthed in
the area, Defense Ministry officials said.
Hundreds of tons of
unexploded bombs from the war remain buried around Japan and are sometimes dug
up at construction sites.
END/UNB/AP/PR