Here’s what I could gather about the Plymouth bomb situation in recent years (up to early 2024) and a quick note on more recent coverage you might check.
Direct answer
- As of early 2024, Plymouth experienced a high-profile incident involving an unexploded World War II bomb that required large-scale evacuations and a controlled disposal operation. Specifics included evacuation of thousands, convoy movement of the device, and a planned detonation or safe disposal at sea or in situ depending on the assessed approach.[1][2]
Context and follow-up you may want
- If you’re looking for the very latest developments, I recommend checking current UK local news outlets (e.g., BBC Cornwall/Devon, Plymouth Live), the UK Ministry of Defence updates, and Plymouth City Council’s major incident pages for real-time updates and final disposal outcomes. These sources typically publish live updates during any UXO disposal operation.[6]
Illustrative snapshot
- In past operations, the approach has included: cordons around the site, evacuation of affected neighborhoods, suspension of transport links, and a carefully staged disposal operation often conducted at sea or in controlled on-site detonation, depending on risk assessments and device specifics.[2][1]
If you’d like, I can search for the latest headlines from today and provide a concise timeline with sources.