The Unexploded Bomb of World War II in Paris stops the Eurostar trip to London and trains to northern France

Eurostar trains do and from London and other trains heading north from Paris stopped on Friday after the discovery of an unexploded bomb dating from World War II near the trail serving in Gare Do Nord in the capital.
French National Train Operator SNCF said in a statement that traffic was stopped at the request of the police.
French transport minister Philippe Tabarot said traffic would be “strongly disturbed” during the day, and only limited services continued in the afternoon and urged passengers to delay their trips.
The bomb discovered about 4 hours local time by workers working on running near the trails in the Seine-Saint-Denis region. The minobaries are sent to the place and their surgery is still taking place. The passengers converged themselves at the station as they opened on Friday.
Gare du Nord is the main European transit center, which serves international destinations north of France, such as the capital of the EU, Brussels and the Netherlands, as well as the main Paris airport and many regional destinations.
The bombs remaining from the First and World War II regularly discovered around France, but it is very rare to find them in such a place full of people.
Tabarot, speaking to Radio and Television, worked, said that local residents and people near the train stations should not have a “fear” of the risk of explosion, emphasizing procedures for removing and removing such bombs.