The India Meteorological Department (IMD) has forecast a partly cloudy sky and temperatures expected to range between 24°C and 42°C in Delhi and National Capital Region (NCR).
Everyone is blaming - "... dust from Pakistan, strong winds ... ".
So Tom Cooper's theory that Pakistan's nuke assets were badly hit and possibly damaged can make sense !!
Science --- you could be killer !!! I wrote an essay during student days and such things can happen even in 2025.
More on these --- Unseasonal showers lash Gujarat's Saurashtra region,
Mahuva records highest at 170 mm; rain and Ahmedabad wakes up to flooded underpasses, uprooted trees
Rain also lash over 160 talukas in Gujarat in 24 hours.
In the east the worst-affected districts will be Paschim Bardhaman, Purulia, Bankura, and Birbhum, where maximum temperatures are likely to soar to 40 degrees Celsius or higher.
By dawn, a westerly breeze of about 10 kmph began to disperse the dust, slightly improving visibility to 1,500 metres at Palam. IMD officials expect conditions to improve further as the day progresses, but the haze has already impacted daily life and air quality.
Some photographs in social media tell the story |
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has clarified that there was no radiation leak from any nuclear facility in Pakistan during the hostilities with India last week. Over the past few days, social media have been abuzz with speculation about a possible nuclear leak at Pakistan's Kirana Hills.
In an exclusive interview with India Today, Fredrik Dahl, spokesperson of the global nuclear watchdog, said, "Based on information available to the IAEA, there has been no radiation leak"
The United States also dodged a question earlier this week relating to a possible nuclear leak in Pakistan. "I have nothing to preview on that at this time," US State Department spokesperson Tommy Pigott said.
RUMOURS OVER KIRANA HILLS, NUCLEAR LEAK
Speculation of a possible nuclear leak gained momentum after several claims were made on social media that the Pakistani army was evacuating the villages surrounding the Kirana Hills. Some videos purportedly show empty houses in the area.
In one of the videos posted on X, a local is seen showing a puff of smoke, claiming that two missiles hit the Kirana Hills.
All that may not be related to 'radiation' too.
Even otherwise; Delhi, Gwalior, Lahore, and Dhaka share a common problem — toxic air pollution. Vehicle emissions, stubble burning, construction debris and industry emissions are responsible.
According to the Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology, Delhi’s Air Quality Index (AQI) reached 236 at 8 am and 249 by 10 am-both in the ‘poor’ category. This is a significant jump from Wednesday’s average AQI of 135 (‘moderate’).
Calm winds are preventing the dust from clearing quickly, and forecasts suggest air quality will remain in the ‘moderate to poor’ range over the next two days.
During peak winter, the region faces a dangerous cocktail of meteorological factors, which prevent particulate matter from dispersing, and a seasonal increase in emissions, with the particulate nature of pollutants like soot exacerbating the problem. The region is also susceptible to a unique phenomenon spurred by the behemoth Himalayas, keeping all emissions at the level initially emitted.
India did not hit "Kirana Hills", the mountain range in Pakistan’s Sargodha district which is believed to house a nuclear missile storage facility, Director General Air (Operations) Air Marshal A.K. Bharti said.
He also stated that all military bases and systems in India remain fully operational
“Thank you for telling us that Kirana Hills houses some nuclear installations. We did not know about it. We have not hit Kirana Hills, whatever is there," Air Marshal Bharti said.
“The government in India, New Delhi, and top brass of the armed forces are cautious enough not to brag too much about this, even to deny it, but we have seen videos showing strikes on one of the… no actually, two defence nuclear weapons storage facilities in Pakistan…,” Tom Cooper told News18.
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