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Explosions across Tehran as Israel claims to have hit centrifuge factory

Explosions across Tehran as Israel claims to have hit centrifuge factory

ITV News5 hours ago

Israel has stepped up its air campaign against Iran as the conflict continues to escalate into its sixth day.
A major explosion was heard at around 5am local in Tehran on Wednesday morning, following other explosions earlier that night.
Acknowledging Wednesday's strikes in Tehran, Israel claimed to have hit a centrifuge manufacturing facility in Tehran, without elaborating on its location.
In a post on Telegram, the IDF issued a statement saying: "Over the past few hours, more than 50 IAF fighter jets completed a series of intelligence-based strikes on military targets in the area of Tehran.
"As part of the broad effort to operate against Iran's nuclear weapons development project, the IAF struck a facility used to manufacture centrifuges in Tehran that was designed to enable the Iranian regime to expand the scale and speed of its uranium enrichment to develop nuclear weapons."
Authorities in Iran offered no acknowledgement of the attacks, which has become increasingly common as the Israeli airstrike campaign has intensified since it began on Friday.
At least one strike appeared to target Tehran's eastern neighborhood of Hakimiyeh, where the paramilitary Revolutionary Guard has an academy.
Israel also claimed it had killed General Ali Shadmani, who it described as Iran's most senior remaining military commander.
Shadmani was relatively unknown in Iran before being appointed last week to a chief-of-staff role as head of the paramilitary Revolutionary Guard's Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters following the killing of his predecessor, General Gholam Ali Rashid, in an Israeli strike.
Israel has maintained these strikes were necessary to degrade Iran's nuclear programmes, despite appearing to put a premature end to talks of a nuclear deal with the US.
Iran has insisted its nuclear program was peaceful, though it was the only non-nuclear-armed state to enrich uranium up to 60%, a short, technical step away from weapons-grade levels of 90%.
The UN nuclear watchdog, was still conducting inspections, though limited, in the country. US intelligence agencies also said they did not believe Iran was actively pursuing a bomb.
The US President Donald Trump continued to escalate rhetoric on social media demanding 'UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER,' and warning Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei that the US knows where he is hiding but that there were no plans to kill him 'at least not for now.'
Amid further strikes and the Trump's calls for the people in Tehran to evacuate, people could be seen fleeing their homes. Many shops were seen shuttered as well, including the ancient Grand Bazaar. The Bazaar has closed only in times of crisis, such as during the 2022 anti-government protests and the coronavirus pandemic.
Israel does not publish regular death tolls, but one human rights group said the strikes in Iran had killed at least 585 people and wounded 1,326 others.
The Washington-based group Human Rights Activists said it had identified 239 of those killed in Israeli strikes as civilians and 126 as security personnel. The group, which also provided detailed casualty figures during the 2022 protests over the death of Mahsa Amini, crosschecks local reports in the Islamic Republic against a network of sources it has developed in the country.
Iran has retaliated against Israel, launching over 400 missiles and hundreds of drones at Israel. So far, 24 people have been killed in Israel.

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