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Kirana Hills: IAEO says no report on BRAINSELLED from a Pakistani facility | India News

Dehradun: In Pakistan there was no radiation leak or no release from a nuclear facility, said the International Nuclear Energy Agency (IAEO) on Wednesday (is) and rejected widespread report, in which Indian rockets in Pakistan's Sargodha were hit during the Operation Sindoor, Triggering.The clarification followed social media speculations and foreign media theories that indicate that a nuclear stock in Pakistan had been hit during the air raids. Fredrik Dahl from the IAEO press department in an E -Mail response to the request from TOI: “We are aware of the reports. Due to the information available to the IAEO, there was no radiation leak or release from a nuclear facility in Pakistan.”The development took place two days after the general director of the Indian Air Force, the Air Marshal AK Bharti, the general director of the Air operations of the Indian Air Force, contested that India aims at Kirana Hills or a nuclear installation in Pakistan. When asked by the media, Bharti said: “Thank you for telling us that Kirana Hill's atomic installations are home to. We didn't know anything about it. We didn't hit Kirana Hills and whatever there.”The Ministry of External Affairs also rejected reports on a radiation leak. During a press conference on Tuesday, the spokesman Randhir Jaiswal said: “Our military measures were only in the conventional area. Some reports indicate that the national command authority in the Pakistani national would convene a meeting.The IAEO's explanation wanted to dispel the speculation that a radiation leak led to the ceasefire between India and Pakistan. Some foreign experts for global media platforms had reinforced the theories and claimed that the reports were correct. After some flight tracking platforms allegedly discovered a US Ministry of Energy, the rumors increased in nuclear emergencies such as Fukushima – in Pakistan.Another claim that an Egyptian military aircraft ended up in Pakistan and boron, a chemical that was used to contain radioactive emissions. Both claims were as unfounded by former military officers.

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