BEIJING, June 7 -- A small ship collecting iron scrap
yesterday pulled up two rusty but live bombs in the Yangtze River, possibly
dating from the Opium Wars, the Anti-Japanese Invasion War or the War of Chinese
Liberation.
The fire control bureau was to destroy the shells in
a couple of days.
The Yangtze River Shipping police collected the
bombs, which had been discovered with magnetic tools, and sent them to the fire
control bureau.
The vessel that found the bombs told the river
police. The bombs were discovered on the bed of the waterway between the
Xinshidong floodgate and the Yangtze River. After two hours the police located
the ship.
Ship owner Li Lishun said he discovered the first
shell about noon when the crew used a powerful magnet to pull up iron scraps, as
the vessel waited for the floodgates to open for traffic.
The rusty shell was 41 centimeters long and 10
centimeters in diameter. The second shell was somewhat smaller.
Police warned local fishermen to be more careful and
never handle old shells that they dredged up or sell them as scrap.
(Source: Shanghai Daily)