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World War II bomb found

‘This was a first for me’: Divers find undetonated World War II bomb in Sydney Harbour

By Megan Gorrey

Sydney Morning Herald, 22 February 2018

Two divers scouring the ocean floor for old bottles and glassware made an unexpected discovery at the bottom of Sydney Harbour on Wednesday: an undetonated bomb from World War II.

The find prompted police to block off an area near Jones Bay at Pyrmont as military personnel seized the device.

Dive instructor Tony Strazzari said he’d plunged into the water for a routine dive with friend Paul Szerenga when he detected the bomb’s cylindrical shape and dart-like end nestled on the floor.

I reached in and felt something heavy and pulled it out and it was a bomb.

“We do a lot of diving in old war areas up and down the coast, mostly looking for old bottles, black glass, embossed bottles, glassware,” Mr Strazzari said.

“We were just swimming there and poking around the silty bottom. I reached in and felt something heavy and pulled it out and it was a bomb.”

Fearful that the device might be disturbed by a boat anchor if it stayed beneath the water, Mr Strazzari tucked the 40-centimetre-long bomb into his diving gear.

His mate wasn’t so unfazed: "When he handed it to me under the water I said, “Holy s---,” Mr Szerenga said.

The Newcastle pair alerted authorities when they surfaced before they “baby-sat” the device until police arrived.

“We sat there and coddled it up so no one got worried. One man did ask what it was and when I told him it was a bomb he just shrugged and walked off,” Mr Strazzari said.

“It wasn't until the cops showed up they realised it was a bomb.”

Police set up a 100-metre exclusion zone in the area, near Pirrama Park, as they called in military personnel to inspect the device. They later reduced the shut-off area to 20 metres.

A NSW Police spokeswoman said the bomb was "unable to be detonated" and not deemed a safety risk.

It was taken by military personnel by about 2pm.

Mr Strazzari said friends had guessed the bomb was a three-inch mortar shell.

“I've found bullets before and I found a rifle once, but never a live artillery shell. This was a first for me.”

A Defence Department spokeswoman said the mortar would be disposed of safely on a military range.

“If a member of the public should find a suspicious item that may be unexploded ordnance, do not touch or disturb it,” the spokeswoman said.

“The local police should be contacted who will arrange for military experts to attend and dispose of it.”

 
Newcastle diving enthusiasts
Bomb not a safety risk

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