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First for breaking news and analysis: Compelling world news stories from NBC News journalists. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook.

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  • 18
    Oct
    2012
    10:38am, EDT

    Van full of bodies stolen during drivers' break in Germany

    By Andy Eckardt, NBC News

    Drivers taking a van loaded with 12 occupied coffins to a German crematorium returned from a bathroom break to discover the vehicle had been stolen, local reports said Thursday.

    Police in the state of Brandenburg told NBC News that the van was one of three vehicles stolen in the early hours of Monday from an industrial car park at Hoppegarten, near Berlin.

    According to local media reports, the drivers were taking a bathroom break on their way to a crematorium in the eastern German city of Meissen when they returned to find their vehicle gone.

    And on Thursday afternoon, the thieves were still on the run with their unusual heist.

     “We have not found the bodies yet,” police spokesman Peter Salender told NBC News.

    The thieves were apparently unaware that the locked vehicle contained 12 neatly-stowed coffins.


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    Under the headline “Car Thieves Stole My Mother’s Body”, German mass circulation newspaper Bild on Thursday identified the daughter of one of the deceased.

    Officials suspect that a gang may have been supplying stolen vehicles to customers in eastern Europe, since another of the three vans have since been found in the western Polish city of Poznan.

    “One of the three vehicles that were stolen at the car park has been found in Poland, but we are continuing to investigate in all directions,” Salender said.

    "Given that three vehicles were stolen at the same time and because of the fact that one van was found in Poland already, we are led to believe that this is the work of organized criminals in eastern Europe," Ulrich Scherding, spokesman for the prosecutor's office in Frankfurt/Oder told NBC News.

    About 8,000 people were evacuated from a town in northwestern Germany after a 550-pound bomb from World War II was found. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

    "Poland has mutated to a transit country for stolen vehicles, so that the vans could end up further east," Scherding added.

    According to information obtained by NBC News, the vehicle with the bodies was not equipped with cooling devices.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • 'Spy of the West': Al-Qaida, Taliban struggle to justify attack on Pakistani teen
    • UK computer hacker wins 10 year fight against extradition to US
    • Algae bloom off Canada tied to company's salmon 'fertilization' test
    • Mystery kidney disease decimates Central America sugarcane workers
    • Clinton: 'We did everything we could to keep our people safe'
    • Demand for palm oil, used in packaged food products, leaves orangutans at risk
    • Assad forces using cluster bombs, rights group says

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    42 comments

    Ya Schultz, does you smell dat? Like you mothers armpit?? Ya Vol? Dumbkoff, why did you not check the back? I know nothing, nothing........

    Show more
    Explore related topics: germany, europe, poland, bodies, weird, crime-courts, andy-eckhardt
  • 28
    Aug
    2012
    7:29am, EDT

    Experts blow up 550-pound WWII bomb found in Munich

    Police in Munich say experts successfully detonated the remains of a 550-pound bomb from the Second World War on Tuesday evening.

    By Andy Eckardt, NBC News

    Updated at 6:56 p.m. ET: MAINZ, Germany -- Nearly 3,000 residents were evacuated from the heart of Munich after construction workers found an undetonated, 550-pound World War II bomb.

    The evacuation, which affected several blocks in the busy party district of Schwabing, was ordered by local officials as a routine security measure.

    Citing the dapd news agency, The Associated Press reported that explosives experts detonated the remains of the bomb on Tuesday night. Burning debris from the controlled explosion reportedly caused fires in several nearby buildings that had been evacuated.


    On Monday night, experts from the Munich bomb disposal squad determined that the explosives were not equipped with a “normal mechanism,” but a chemical, delayed-action detonator.

    "It is an extremely dangerous device," Roman Leitow, a Munich fire department spokesman told NBC News.


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    “A specialist is presently trying to defuse the bomb with his team,” he added.

    Leave immediately
    Fire department officials went from door-to-door to enforce the evacuation, after fire trucks had passed through the streets, instructing residents with loudspeaker announcements to leave their homes immediately.

    Marc Mueller / EPA

    Diethard Posorski, of the bomb disposal team, stands next to an unexploded WW II bomb which was found at a construction site in Munich, Germany, Monday.

    Experts from Munich fire department spent most of Monday night shielding the bomb with sand, bales of straw and other insulating material, which would catch shrapnel and muffle the shock wave in case of an uncontrolled explosion.

    Most of the evacuated residents spent the night with friends and family, but about 600 were brought to one of the three temporary shelters set up by in nearby schools by rescue teams. Red Cross workers handed out blankets and drinks.

    Massive WWII bomb successfully defused

    During World War II, Allied forces dropped nearly 2 million tons of bombs on Germany and experts estimate that between 5 to 15 percent of the bombs did not explode.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Pakistani Christians live in fear after girl's blasphemy arrest
    • Marines punish three for urinating on Taliban corpses
    • Afghan soldier kills 2 Americans; official disputes accidental claim
    • Botched restoration turns Spanish church into tourist attraction
    • Afghan sources: Top Haqqani commander killed
    • Bulldozer wrecks Sufi mosque and graves in Libya sectarian attack
    • Syria VP Al-Sharaa appears in public, ending defection rumor

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    190 comments

    Let us hope this bomb can be successfully defused and removed without injury to anyone or damage to property.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: germany, europe, bomb, world-war-ii, munich, featured, andy-eckhardt
  • 22
    Aug
    2012
    10:08am, EDT

    Bao Bao, one of world’s oldest pandas, dies at Berlin zoo

    AFP/Getty Images file

    Panda bear Bao Bao plays in his indoor enclosure at the Berlin Zoo in 2007.

    By Andy Eckhardt, NBC News

    MAINZ, Germany -- Bao Bao, one of the world’s oldest giant pandas, died at the age of 34 early Wednesday, officials at Berlin’s zoo told NBC News.

    The animal's health had been deteriorating over the past months, zoo officials said. Bao Bao had not been eating well and had shown a gaunt face, zoo officials say. The cause of death is being determined in an autopsy.


    In 1980, Bao Bao was given as a gift by China to Helmut Schmidt, who was the West German chancellor at the time. Bao Bao was the only remaining Panda at the Berlin zoo after the death of Yan Yan in 2007.

    A 20-year-old panda gives birth to her sixth cub and the little one's arrival is captured on the San Diego Zoo's "Panda Cam." TODAY.com's Dara Brown reports.

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • Trayvon Martin case: How might it be treated abroad?
    • Israelis fret over 'lynching' of Palestinian
    • Video: Poaching surge threatens survival of rhinos
    • Anti-tanning 'Facekinis' cause stir on China beach
    • Reports: Kim Jong Un will travel to Iran
    • Slideshow: Migration in the Americas
    • Reports: Olympic sprinter drowned when migrant boat sank
    • With wife's conviction, what is next for China's Bo Xilai?

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

     

    5 comments

    Had Dubya focused on Afghanistan completely, instead of waging a war on Iraq in 2003 to settle a vendetta stemming from a plot during the Clinton administration years that was uncovered by US intelligence that Iraq had a red-dot on George H.W. Bush's life, we'd probably have been already done in tha …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: animals, zoo, science, panda, wildlife, berlin, andy-eckhardt
  • 22
    Jun
    2012
    9:12am, EDT

    Soccer gets political as Greece seeks revenge on paymaster Germany

    Bartlomiej Zborowski / EPA

    Greek fans cheer for their team in downtown Gdansk, Poland, before their match against Germany on Friday.

    By NBC News' Andy Eckardt and Reuters

    Greeks were hoping against hope that their national soccer team would triumph over mighty Germany in the Euro 2012 championship, restoring lost pride to the debt-stricken country by getting one over its economic paymaster.

    Friday night's quarterfinal fixture, in the Polish port of Gdansk, pits two nations against each other whose ties have rarely been so sour, so bristling.


    Greece fans are seeking respect for their country after its humiliating economic collapse and Germany’s predominant role in lending bailout money – along with strict austerity measures. 

    "It's not good that sports and politics are together, but today we have no other choice," said Greece fan Michalis Kalotrapesis, wearing a white national team shirt and training top. "We are playing for our country and for our image in Europe and all over the world." 

    Frank Augstein / AP

    An artist, himself painted in German colors, paints the face of a soccer fan with the colors of the Greek national flag in Gdansk on Friday.

    Germany will be cheered on at the game by Chancellor Angela Merkel, a hated figure in Greece, who for many personifies the painful bailout conditions and the euro zone's strict approach to the debt-strapped state.

    Merkel loves football and loves the German team. Earlier in the tournament, she went to visit their training base. She attends high-profile matches and was once photographed with bare-chested midfielder Mesut Ozil in the changing room.

    'Bye-bye Greeks'
    A crunch meeting between Merkel and other European leaders in Rome on Friday was moved up to an earlier start time so that she could attend the game.

    "Bye-bye Greeks, we can't rescue you today!" Germany's top-selling Bild proclaimed on its front page on Friday in the colors of the Greek flag.

    Thomas Peter / Reuters

    A man takes a copy of the German "Bild" newspaper from a stack in a newsagent in Berlin Friday. The headline reads, "Bye, bye Greeks. Today we won't be able to save you!"

    "Bankrupt THEM," blared leading Greek paper Sport Day.

    Even the respected Greek daily Kathimerini drummed home to Greeks that this match is against a foe popularly blamed for saddling Greece with a punitive austerity program, chronic unemployment and years of deep economic recession.

    "Whoever thinks today's match is just a game is wrong," the paper wrote, vowing it was "politics (maybe even war) by other means."

    More from NBC Sports on Euro 2012:
    • Euro zone battle moves to pitch in Germany-Greece
    • Greece seeks to win Germany's respect
    • Topless protest shocks Euro 2012 psychic pig
    • Shaken France must find a way to stop Spain

    "To many Greeks, victory will represent the triumph of the weak against the wealth, might and arrogance of the powerful -- the victim would humble his executioner… If the Germans win, they'll see it as confirmation of their diligence, strategy, talent and thrift," it added.

    Some German car manufacturers, like Volkswagen and Daimler, are making special arrangements that will allow their workforce on shift to watch the match.

    Greece has never beaten Germany
    Officials from Volkswagen told NBC News that employees will be able to leave early on Friday, but that workers will have to make up for the free time at a later point.

    Greece have never beaten Germany but now would be the ideal time to do so in order to cheer up the public back home and give them hope that Greece can repeat their amazing run to the European Championship crown in 2004.

    The chances are slim to say the least. The Germans, among the favorites to take the tournament title, go into the match on the back of 14 consecutive competitive victories stretching back to the 2010 World Cup.

    For Germany, playing in Gdansk, which prior to World War Two was the German- and Polish-inhabited free city of Danzig, will feel like a home game.

    Thirty thousand Germans are expected to travel to watch the game. Only 6,000 Greek supporters are expected. Most Poles say their hearts beat for the underdog.

    Back in Athens, not everyone was drawn into the spirit.

    "I couldn't care less," Said Panagiotis Pappas, 22, a chemistry student. "We're on the brink of disaster and all they care is about is football for Christ's sake." 

    More world news from msnbc.com and NBC News:

    • Mexico captures suspected son of most wanted drug lord 'El Chapo'
    • Reports: West may offer Syria's Assad immunity if gives up power
    • Norway prosecutors ask court to declare mass murderer Breivik insane
    • Mass grave found of 'giant wombats' the size of a rhinoceros
    • South African couple released by Somali pirates after 20 months

    Follow us on Twitter: @msnbc_world

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    66 comments

    If only the Greeks showed the same enthusiasm when it came to actually working hard and paying their taxes....their country might not be in the crapper today.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: germany, soccer, greece, debt, bailout, sport, featured, euro-2012, andy-eckhardt

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