Unexploded WW II bomb in Paris halts Eurostar travel to London and trains to northern France


Eurostar trains to and from London and other trains heading northward from Paris were brought to a halt Friday following the discovery of an unexploded bomb dating back to the Second World War near tracks serving the French capital’s busy Gare du Nord station.

France’s national train operator SNCF said in a statement that traffic was stopped at the request of police.

French Transport Minister Philippe Tabarot said traffic would be “strongly disrupted” throughout the day with only limited service resuming in the afternoon, and urged travellers to postpone their trips.

The bomb was discovered around 4 a.m. local time by workers doing earth-moving work near the tracks in the Seine-Saint-Denis region. Minesweepers were sent to the site and their operation is still going on. Stranded travellers converged on the station as it opened Friday.

The Gare du Nord is a major European transit hub, serving international destinations north of France such as the EU capital, Brussels, and the Netherlands, as well as the main Paris airport and many regional destinations.

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A passenger walks pasts an information screen displaying that traffic has been stopped at the train station. (Geoffroy Van der Hasselt/AFP/Getty Images)

Bombs left over from the First and Second World Wars are regularly discovered around France but it is very rare to find them in such a people-packed location.

Tabarot, speaking on broadcaster Sud Radio, said local residents and people near the train stations should have “no fear” of a risk of explosion, stressing the procedures in place for defusing and removing such bombs.



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