Thousands stranded as massive WWII bomb blocks Paris train station

Passengers queue to take a bus from Opera district, in order to reach Paris Charles-de-Gaulle Airport (CDG), as train traffic has been stopped at the Gare du Nord station in Paris on Mar 7, 2025, following the discovery of a World War II bomb. (Photo: AFP/Geoffroy Van Der Hasselt)
The unearthing of a 500-kilogramme World War II bomb near
tracks outside Paris on Friday halted traffic and stranded thousands of
passengers in one of the biggest rail disruptions in the French capital for
years.
On Friday morning, all traffic to the Gare du Nord train
station- France's busiest railway terminus serving international trains to
London and mainland Europe, high-speed and local connections- was halted as
police worked to disable the device.
Hours later, France's transport minister said services from
Gare du Nord, which is located in the north of the French capital, would
gradually resume from 1700 GMT Friday.
The defusing operations were "finally over" and
went well, Philippe Tabarot said, adding that the 500-kilogramme bomb
"contained 200 kilogrammes of explosives".
All Eurostar trains heading to and from Paris, including the
popular service to and from London through the Channel Tunnel, were cancelled
for the rest of Friday.
The usually packed RER B suburban train was also halted at
Gare du Nord, cutting the main public transport route to Charles de Gaulle
airport.
In London, crowds gathered at St Pancras railway station.
Many travellers looked stressed as they made calls and searched for alternative
options.
Friday was a rude start to Michelle Abeyie's 40th birthday,
which she had planned to celebrate with her friends on her first ever trip to
the French capital.
"I'm really upset, disappointed, frustrated,
stressed," Abeyie told AFP.
"We would've gone to the Louvre and the Moulin Rouge
tonight," Abeyie said, wiping away a few tears.
In Paris, however, Owen Pritchard, a tourist seeking to
return to London, was philosophical.
"I don't want to get on a train that runs over any
unexploded World War II ordnance," he said.
"I would rather they clear that and then make sure
it's safe to travel."
The unexploded bomb was found "near the tracks"
about 2.5 kilometres (1.5 miles) from the station overnight during maintenance
work carried out in the northern Paris suburb of Saint Denis, the national SNCF
rail company said.
The ordnance dating back to World War II was discovered
about 200 meters north of the Paris ring road.
The prefect of Seine-Saint-Denis requested that people
living less than 500 metres (yards) from the site stay indoors.
Part of the ring road and the A1 motorway were closed, with
officials reporting traffic jams extending 200 kilometres outside Paris.
Unexploded ordnance is still found across Europe, particularly
in Germany, where the ground remains riddled with it, 80 years after World War
II.
But Matthieu Chabanel, head of rail infrastructure
management unit SNCF Reseau, said that finding a bomb of such size was
"really quite exceptional.
"We know that during World War II, the rail network was
heavily bombed, especially here north of Paris where there were also many
factories," he told reporters.
Sud-Rail union official Fabien Villedieu posted a picture of
the ordnance covered in dirt.
It was not immediately clear when and by whom the bomb was
dropped during World War II and if it dated to before or after the 1940
occupation of Paris by Nazi Germany.
Many passengers could not mask their irritation at the
sudden change of plans.
"I've been waiting since 6:00 am for an RER to
Goussainville," said 55-year-old Corinne Schiavenato, referring to a town
north of Paris.
"I tried to take a replacement bus, but it's impossible,
too many passengers, they're packed. I'm self-employed. I have a client who has
been waiting for me since 7:00 am"
"It's funny, I've just come back from Lorient where
unexploded shells are discovered all the time," said Chloe Ternand,
referring to a town in western France.
Eurostar said it expected services between Paris and London,
as well as between Paris and Brussels, to return to normal on Saturday. Two
extra departures would be added to the London route, it added.
Its services from London to Brussels and London to
Amsterdam, which do not go via Paris, were running normally.
In 2019, the discovery of a wartime bomb interrupted traffic
between the Saint-Lazare station and the western suburbs of Paris.
Gare du Nord is one of the busiest train stations in Europe,
carrying more than 226 million passengers in 2023, according to SNCF.
Want to send us a story? SMS to 25170 or WhatsApp 0743570000 or Submit on Citizen Digital or email wananchi@royalmedia.co.ke
Comments
No comments yet.
Leave a Comment