6 Vietnamese Killed: US Bomb From War Era Explodes

Officials and villagers prepare coffins for six Vietnamese people killed by a U.S. war-era bomb at a village in Khanh Son district, in the southern central province of Khanh Hoa on Aug. 18, 2017. (STR/AFP/Getty Images)

Friday, 18 August 2017 06:08 PM EDT ET

A U.S. war-era bomb killed six Vietnamese villagers Friday, including three children, when it detonated after the villagers discovered it in their farmland in Khanh Hoa province.

"The initial reason for the blast, which killed six, was that people were cutting open the 105 mm shell," VGPNews, the government's online mouthpiece, reported, according to AFP.

Local police refused to comment on the accident, which also left two Vietnamese villagers wounded and tore down a house in Ta Luong village, according to state media.

Since the end of the Vietnam War in 1975, more than 42,000 people have been killed and over 62,100 injured by unexploded ordnance dropped by U.S. aircraft, according government figures.

Most of the blasts are triggered by people striking the bombs while farming or trying to salvage the metal casings and explosives from the munitions.

The metal is usually sold for scrap, while the explosives are used by fishermen.

According to the government, half of the 16 million tons of bombs dropped by American forces are still embedded in farmland and jungle across Vietnam's central provinces.

© AFP 2025


TheWire
A U.S. war-era bomb killed six Vietnamese villagers Friday, including three children, when it detonated after the villagers discovered it in their farmland in Khanh Hoa province.
vietnamese, killed, us, bomb, war, era
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2017-08-18
Friday, 18 August 2017 06:08 PM
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