PAHALI KHABAR

russia ukraine war ukraine biological weapon from mosquitoes targets russian troops igor kirilov claim

Russia-Ukraine War: The war between Russia and Ukraine continues even today. The ongoing war between the two countries reached a very deadly turn on Tuesday (December 18). Ukraine claimed to have killed Igor Kirillov, the chief of Russia’s chemical-radiation and biological troops. Ukraine carried out this attack when Kirillov was entering a building. Ukraine’s intelligence agency placed 300 kg of explosives in the scooter and detonated it at that place.

It is noteworthy that Igor Kirillov was the Russian person who had informed that Ukraine was manufacturing biological weapons through mosquitoes, which would be extremely dangerous. Russian President Vladimir Putin was also in tension regarding this biological weapon. They did not want to let such power come into the hands of Ukraine in any way.

Kirillov had made a claim regarding Ukraine

According to the BBC report, in March 2022, Kirillov had claimed to Ukraine that America was developing a lab to make biological weapons in Ukraine. Some labs were also taken over by the Russian army. After this, Kirillov had claimed that Ukraine is engaged in making a dirty bomb, the responsibility of which has been assigned to two teams.

However, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky rejected Kirillov’s claim, saying, “If Russia is saying such things, it means that Putin himself is manufacturing such a weapon.”

Kirillov came forward with evidence

Last summer, just days after making the claims against Ukraine, Kirillov came forward with evidence. He said, a lab has been built near Avdivka city of Ukraine, where chemical weapons were being made. However, now that lab is under the control of Russia. It was told that hydrocyanic acid and cyanogen chloride were being used along with chemical war agent BZ. Kirillov had claimed that Ukraine planned to target Russian soldiers with malaria-infected mosquitoes.

Kirillov had claimed that dangerous medicines would be given to malaria-infected mosquitoes, which would make someone sick as soon as they stick to their body and after which that person would gradually die.

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