Japanese airport reopens with WWII bomb still there
JAPAN: A huge World War II bomb uncovered near a busy runway
was underneath a shield of concrete and sandbags on Wednesday as flights
resumed at an airport in northern Japan, a government official said.
A worker rebuilding drainage systems at Sendai Airport --
which was swamped by last year's tsunami -- on Monday uncovered the 500-pound
(225-kilogramme) bomb, believed to have been dropped by US forces.
Bomb disposal experts ordered the construction of
three-metre-high (10-foot-high) concrete walls, supported by soil up to the
same height, to protect the bomb.
Crews piled some 300 sandbags, each weighing a tonne, on top
of the mound to construct a casing that stands six metres high.
The 110 centimetres (43 inches) long bomb is now sitting at
the bottom of the structure, waiting for military experts to defuse and remove
it once legal and logistical details are worked out, the transport ministry
official said.
AFP
I could have probably raised them in L.A. and they would have been great and had so many things at their fingertips and been exposed to so many things. But we travel a lot, so I don't think that moving out of town is sheltering the girls at all. Maybe protecting them a little bit more, trying to prolong their youth.
ReplyDeleteFlights to Abuja | Cheap Flights to Abuja | Cheap Air Tickets to Abuja