Newsletter
Weather
Community
English home Forum Photo Gallery Features Newsletter Archive   About US Help Site Map
China
World
Opinion
Business
Sci-Edu
Culture/Life
Sports
Photos
 Services
- Newsletter
- Online Community
- China Biz Info
- News Archive
- Feedback
- Voices of Readers
- Weather Forecast
 RSS Feeds
- China 
- Business 
- World 
- Sci-Edu 
- Culture/Life 
- Sports 
- Photos 
- Most Popular 
- FM Briefings 
 Search
 About China
- China at a glance
- China in brief 2004
- Chinese history
- Constitution
- Laws & regulations
- CPC & state organs
- Ethnic minorities
- Selected Works of Deng Xiaoping




Home >> China
UPDATED: 19:05, June 12, 2007
3,500 Japanese wartime bombs found buried in northeast China
font size    

Three thousand five hundred bombs abandoned by Japanese troops during World War II have been unearthed from the base of a hill in Dunhua City in northeast China's Jilin Province, police said on Tuesday.

The bombs, weighing more than 40 tons, were found buried in a rectangular pit 15 meters long and two meters wide at the foot of a small hill in Dunhua's Shaheyan Township, which was once the site of a Japanese military airport, police said.

The bombs, potentially the biggest weapon find ever in Jilin, were discovered by three local farmers from Daqiao Township on June 3 using a metal detector to find scrap iron left by Japanese troops which they hoped to sell for money, police said.

The bombs were in a good state of preservation. Experts from the local bomb disposal center said that if the largest one -- weighing around 35 kg -- were to explode, people and livestock within a radius of at least five km would be in danger.

The bombs have been transported to the center to be destroyed.

Chinese official statistics show Japan abandoned at least two million tons of chemical weapons at about 40 sites in 15 provinces at the end of World War II, mostly in the three northeast provinces of Heilongjiang, Jilin and Liaoning.

China and Japan joined the United Nations Chemical Weapons Convention in 1997. Two years later, they signed a memorandum obliging Japan to remove all weapons by June 2007 and provide all necessary funds, equipment and personnel for their retrieval and destruction.

But the Japanese government has asked for an extension of the disposal deadline to April 2012.

Source: Xinhua


Comments on the story Comment on the story Recommend to friends Tell a friend Print friendly Version Print friendly format Save to disk Save this



"Olympic Games in My Heart" English Contest

   Recommendation
- Text Version
- RSS Feeds
- China Forum
- Newsletter
- People's Comment
- Most Popular
 Related News
Manufacturers, Exporters, Wholesalers - Global trade starts here.

Dic

Versions:
Copyright by People's Daily Online, all rights reserved