Okinawa’s capital city of Naha is planning to evacuate 1,400 people while Japanese troops disarm and remove a suspected United States bomb from World War II next month.
According to Naha’s website, the 551-pound ordnance was discovered at the construction site of a sewage system in the city’s Shuri district last December. Stars and Stripes reported that the Japan Ground Self-Defense Force’s 101st Explosive Ordnance Disposal Unit is planning to dig 20 feet deep and 10 feet wide around the bomb’s shell prior to removing the bomb fuse.
Read more…
Source: American Military News
Related:
- Chemical, Biological, Radiological, Nuclear and explosive (CBRNe)-threat Emergency Preparedness and Response event to take place in Tokyo, Japan
April 30, 2018
The Non-Conventional Threat (NCT) Asia Pacific event is coming to Japan for its third edition! Taking place in the Marriott Hotel in Tokyo from the 28th to the 30th of May, the event is hosted by the CBRNe Society in partnership with the National Institutes for Quantum and Radiological Science and Technology (QST), the Japanese Science and ...
- Japan Pledges $1 Million For Demining Project
March 12, 2018
The Japanese embassy in Kabul on Monday signed agreements with two Afghan companies to start demining areas in Panjshir and Parwan provinces. The embassy will provide over $1 million USD to the companies to fund the project and to establish a veterinary center in Paktia. Officials said the demining project aims to clear over 1.5 million square meters of land. “We hope that our partners spend the money properly ...
- UNOPS and the government of Japan support demining in Ukraine
December 12, 2017
With funding from Japan, a project is addressing an urgent need to replace the State Emergency Service of Ukraine’s obsolete demining equipment. To help increase the efficiency of the country’s demining process, the Government of Japan worked with UNOPS to purchase vehicles and ground-penetrating radar detectors, worth more than $200,000. Read more… Source: UNOPS

