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Greek soldiers on Sunday successfully defused a World War II bomb in Thessaloniki, the country's second largest city, after evacuating tens of thousands of people from the area. The bomb was unearthed near a petrol station in the northern port city during road works last week.
"The operation is over, everything went well," regional security chief Apostolos Tzitzikostas said four hours after a demining team began its work.
The 1.5-metre (4.9-feet) -long bomb was initially thought to contain nearly 250 kilogrammes (550 pounds) of explosives, but on closer inspection was found to be a 170-kilo device.
Army chief of staff Nikos Phanios said the bomb's firing mechanism "was still in a very good shape, and this was what had us worried." The device was American-made he said.
According to Greek media reports, the bomb was dropped by a British plane during air strikes on the city's nearby railway station and port in 1943 in which hundreds of local inhabitants died.
The start of the operation was slightly delayed as police removed a camera that had been placed above the crater by a Greek media outlet in breach of guidelines for covering the event.
Some 70,000 people were evacuated within a 1.9-kilometre (1.1-mile) radius of the site, affecting three working-class neighbourhoods west of the city centre.
The operation was unprecedented in Greece, "where a bomb of this size has never been found in an area this densely populated," Tzitzikostas said. He praised the population for its discipline.
But shopkeeper Stelios Orphanos said many chose to stay at home, "because they are scared of thieves."
Most of the buses brought for evacuation remained empty as many people left on their own. Some 400 refugees in a nearby camp were also bussed to safer areas.

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