'Holy hell, that's a bomb'

Traffic is diverted from State Highway 1 in central Dunedin following a bomb scare at the Dunedin...
Traffic is diverted from State Highway 1 in central Dunedin following a bomb scare at the Dunedin Hospice Shop yesterday morning. Photos by Linda Robertson/Stephen Jaquiery/New Zealand Police.
The corroded ordnance, at first believed to be a mortar bomb, that sparked the alert.
The corroded ordnance, at first believed to be a mortar bomb, that sparked the alert.
A member of the New Zealand Defence Force bomb disposal unit, based at Burnham, removes a box,...
A member of the New Zealand Defence Force bomb disposal unit, based at Burnham, removes a box, containing the ordnance, from the Dunedin Hospice Shop.

A box containing an old train set - and what was believed to be a corroded mortar bomb - triggered a major police callout in central Dunedin yesterday.

The drama ended when the ordnance - later identified as a smoke bomb from the 1970s - was removed and detonated at a safe place by the Burnham-based New Zealand Defence Force bomb disposal unit.

Dunedin Hospice Shop manager Cat Callanan was sorting through recycled metal when she came across a ''lovely old train set'' in a box.

She also found a corroded item, shaped like a bomb, which she picked up to show another staff member.

She carried the ''leaking item'' to volunteer John Vickerstaff, who shouted at her: ''Holy hell, that's a bomb. Get everyone out of the building.''

Mr Vickerstaff said, as a child, he had played with souvenirs from World War 2 and ''usually they were safe''.

''With this one, it was too hard to tell. I knew what it was and just didn't like the look of it.''

Police evacuated and cordoned off several Bond St buildings, and temporarily diverted traffic away from State Highway 1 between Jervois and Rattray Sts.

At the scene, Sergeant Steve Aitken said the cordon and traffic diversions were necessary as police were unsure what they were dealing with.

The ordnance was in a ''fairly corrosive state and we are unsure whether it is alive or inert''.

Yesterday afternoon, police tracked down the person who had donated the train set in good faith. The person believed the ordnance was a smoke round.

Sgt Aitken praised the charity shop staff for contacting police.

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