Skip to content
The HALO Trust
Contact | Careers | Media | HALO Ukraine
Donate
  • What we do

    • What we do

    • Clearing explosives

    • Managing weapons

    • Teaching safety

    • Empowering women

    • Protecting the environment

  • Where we work

    • Where we work

    • Africa

      Africa

      • Angola

      • Cote D'Ivoire

      • Ethiopia

      • Ghana

      • Guinea Bissau

      • Kenya

      • Malawi

      • Mauritania

      • Mozambique

      • Nigeria

      • Somalia and Somaliland

      • Togo

      • Zimbabwe

      • Angola

      • Cote D'Ivoire

      • Ethiopia

      • Ghana

      • Guinea Bissau

      • Kenya

      • Malawi

      • Mauritania

      • Mozambique

      • Nigeria

      • Somalia and Somaliland

      • Togo

      • Zimbabwe

    • Asia

      Asia

      • Cambodia

      • Laos

      • Myanmar

      • Solomon Islands

      • Sri Lanka

      • Afghanistan

      • Cambodia

      • Laos

      • Myanmar

      • Solomon Islands

      • Sri Lanka

      • Afghanistan

    • Europe and Caucasus

      Europe and Caucasus

      • Kosovo

      • Moldova

      • Nagorno Karabakh

      • Ukraine

      • Kosovo

      • Moldova

      • Nagorno Karabakh

      • Ukraine

    • Latin America

      Latin America

      • Colombia

      • El Salvador

      • Guatemala

      • Honduras

      • Colombia

      • El Salvador

      • Guatemala

      • Honduras

    • Middle East

      Middle East

      • Iraq

      • Libya

      • Syria

      • West Bank

      • Yemen

      • Iraq

      • Libya

      • Syria

      • West Bank

      • Yemen

  • About us

    • About us

    • History of HALO

    • Leadership team

    • Governance

      • Governance

    • Trustees

    • Reports

    • Partners

      • Partners

      • SoftwareOne partnership

  • Get involved

    • Get involved

    • Donate

      • Donate

    • Legacy giving

    • Corporate giving

    • Raise money

    • Fundraising promise

    • Email newsletters

      • Email newsletters

  • News

  • Contact

  • Careers

  • Media

  • HALO Ukraine

Donate
More than 200 tonnes of soil loaded around a vast aircraft bomb to minimise the risk posed to civilians in Kabul city centre, Afghanistan

HALO undertakes clearance of large aircraft bomb found in Kabul city centre

20th March 2013 | Afghanistan | News | Clearing explosives

On 14th March 2013 a construction company working for the Ministry of Interior uncovered a thousand pound (five hundred kilogramme) blast bomb in the heart of Kabul City. The bomb, a Russian made FAB500 M54 blast bomb, dated from the Civil War era and had the potential to wreak catastrophic damage and panic within Kabul. The bomb was too dangerous to move but threatened a wide area and so the clearance of the bomb was a major undertaking.

The construction company approached the International Security Assistance Force who, because of its very sensitive location, close to a major mosque and the Afghan parliament, asked HALO to undertake the clearance. Because the bomb lay in a busy city centre area, just one thousand metres from the national parliament it was decided to undertake the disposal in the early hours of the morning when general activity was at its quietest.

The potential destruction of this size of bomb is such that an eight hundred metre safety cordon was needed. This was established by the Afghan police. Of note within the cordon lay:

•The Mosseni Mosque, the main Shia mosque in Kabul

•The Habibi High school, whose alumni include President Karzai, where more than a thousand students study

•The Mosseni University, a major Shia university

•The headquarters of Aryana Television

•and just outside the cordon lies the Afghan Parliament

HALO’s Afghan team have unrivalled experience of dealing with Russian aircraft bombs in Afghanistan, but despite their skills there is always a chance of the bomb exploding. In order to minimize the subsequent damage if the bomb did explode, HALO had to put in protective works which involved loading more than two hundred tonnes of soil around the bomb to absorb any blast. Then a major clearance evacuation exercise carried out by the Afghan National Police cleared the population most at risk.

The clearance operation took place on the night of 17th/18th March 2013, with the fuze being removed with an explosive wrench (a rocket wrench) at 00:10 on the morning of 18th March.

The unfuzed bomb was carried out of the city in the early hours of 18th March and destroyed the next day at around thirty kilometres from the city. Had this bomb exploded in the daytime, thousands of Afghans would have been within its danger area. There is also no doubt that a thousand pound bomb exploding just a thousand metres from the parliament would have caused widespread panic both within the building and across the city. After the bomb had been safely dealt with by HALO, very senior Afghan officials expressed their pride and amazement that with so many foreign military forces in the city that such an important job fell to an Afghan team to address.

Get Involved

  • Donate
  • Raise money

Get In Touch

  • Contact
  • Media enquiries
Sitemap | Terms of use | Privacy policy | Cookie policy | Tenders for HALO projects
The HALO Trust | Copyright © 2025
Sign up for emails
Visit HALO USA

CARRONFOOT, THORNHILL, DUMFRIES, DG3 5BF

The HALO Trust is a company limited by guarantee. Registered in England No. 2228587. Registered Charity No. 1001813 and (in Scotland) SC037870. Registered Office: One Bartholomew Close, Barts Square, London EC1A 7BL

The HALO Trust (USA), Inc. is a 501(c)(3) not-for-profit organization US Federal Tax ID Number 52-2158152
Office: 1730 Rhode Island Ave NW, Suite 206, Washington, DC 20036 

By registering for our updates, or making a donation to us, you expressly agree to your information being used by The HALO Trust and The HALO Trust (USA), Inc. in accordance with our privacy protection policy. You can unsubscribe at any time.

We now have a dedicated website for visitors in the USA and Canada.

Visit dedicated site