
Newham Council said: "Work will not start on lifting and removing the device until the initial 214-metre zone is clear. It said specialist officers "have attended and confirmed it as a German 500-kilogramme fused device". "Officers are assisting with a controlled evacuation of up to 500 people," the Newham Council local authority said in a statement, adding that a former town hall building had been opened up for evacuees. Homes within the exclusion zone were evacuated overnight and the local authority was providing residents with temporary accommodation and support. The bomb was discovered at around 5:00 am on Sunday and a 214-metre exclusion zone was imposed "to ensure that the ordnance can be safely dealt with whilst limiting any risk to the public," police said. Monday's shutdown affected up to 16,000 passengers who were due to fly, although some airlines switched their flights to other London hubs. "At this stage we estimate that the removal of the device from location will be completed by tomorrow morning," London's Metropolitan Police said in a statement. The unexploded ordnance was discovered in King George V Dock, during planned works near the runway of London's most central airport.īritish police said the 1.5-metre (five-foot) shell was "lying in a bed of dense silt" and removing it depended on the tides. LONDON, United Kingdom (AFP) - London City Airport was closed on Monday as military experts worked to remove a 500-kilogramme (1,100-pound) German World War II bomb found in a neighbouring dock. In this file photo taken on OctoBritish Airways planes taxi on the runway at London City Airport with the financial towers and office buildings of the City of London in the background.
