World War I Grenade Discovered Among Potatoes At Hong Kong Potato Chip Factory
Hong Kong police destroyed a German-made grenade from World War I on Saturday morning after the device cropped up in a shipment of imported potatoes at a local potato chip factory.
The grenade, described by authorities as having been caked with mud and dirt, was discovered by workers at a factory run by Japanese snack maker Calbee, South China Morning Post reported.
Police said they used a “high-pressure water firing technique” to safely detonate the weapon.
Exclusive!
We detonated a German made WW1 hand grenade earlier this afternoon.
獨家!
拆彈專家💣較早時間引爆了一枚第一次世界大戰時德國製的手榴彈。#HongKong #Police #Emergency #safeguarding #EOD pic.twitter.com/xc1KxsZwjK— Hong Kong Police Force (@hkpoliceforce) February 2, 2019
Superintendent Wilfred Wong Ho Hon said the “the grenade was imported from France together with the other potatoes,” CNN reported.
Dave Macri, a military historian, told the Morning Post that the grenade had likely been dug up by accident by potato harvesters in France.
“If it was covered in mud, the grenade was likely to have been left behind, dropped by soldiers there during the war, or left there after it was thrown” by enemies, Macri said.
World War I grenade found in shipment of potatoes headed to Hong Kong https://t.co/vGiycDGym4 pic.twitter.com/etEN0o9E7v
— CNN International (@cnni) February 2, 2019
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This article originally appeared on HuffPost.