Iran vows to 'exact heavy price' after Israel strikes nuclear sites
Iran has vowed revenge after Israel struck two nuclear sites in the country overnight.
Iran's Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi said Israel had struck two steel factories, a power plant and civilian nuclear sites.
"Israel claims it acted in coordination with the US," he wrote on X.
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"Iran will exact HEAVY price for Israeli crimes."
Araghchi said the attacks contradicted US President Donald Trump's claims of an extended deadline for diplomacy.
Israel's Defence Forces announced they had targeted a heavy water plant in central Iran.
They said the plant was a "key plutonium production site for nuclear weapons".
"The IDF will not allow the Iranian regime to continue advancing its nuclear weapons program, which poses an existential threat to Israel and the entire world," the IDF said in a statement.
Iran's Atomic Energy Organisation said there were no casualties or radiation leaks as a result of the attack.
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International human rights organisations have condemned attacks on nuclear facilities this week.
Executive Director of the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) Melissa Parke said it was "playing roulette with civilian lives".
"Nuclear risks are not theoretical -- they are immediate and human," she said.
"The US, Israel and Iran must stop all military action and return to the diplomatic path."
Before working with ICAN, Parke was a Labor MP representing the WA seat of Fremantle.
ICAN said a direct hit on a nuclear facility would not cause an atomic weapon-like explosion.
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But a release of radiation could have profound long-term impacts on the region.
Overnight Iran attacked targets in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia.
Meanwhile, Iran has agreed to allow humanitarian aid and food through the Strait of Hormuz.
Iran is effectively blockading the narrow body of water, preventing shipping from going in or out of the Persian Gulf.
But today's decision would allow agricultural shipments into the region.
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