Locals from the closed military settlement at Nyonoksa on the White Sea coast were earlier this week told that they would have to leave the area on Wednesday morning. Russian military authorities explained to locals that the evacuation was planned in advance and had nothing to do with last week’s missile explosion, the local 29.ru news website reported. According to the plans, trains would collect the locals and evacuate them from the area.

Late Tuesday, however, the evacuation was canceled and all locals were allowed to stay home, the local news website reports. An inhabitant of the village told the news website that locals are regularly told to leave the area. “It happens regularly — about once per month — and everybody is evacuated from the village." Nyonoksa has a population of about 450 people and is located on the White Sea coast, approximately 20 kilometers west of Severodvinsk, a city close to where last week’s missile explosion occurred and which recorded a large spike in radiation levels following the accident. Thursday’s blast rocked the small village which houses a strategically important testing site for the Russian Armed Forces.

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Two days after the incident, state nuclear corporation Rosatom confirmed that five of its nuclear experts were killed in the blast and admitted that the liquid propulsion system that exploded contained an "isotope power source." On Monday, Director of the Russian Federal Nuclear Centre VNIIEF in the closed nuclear research town of Sarov, Vyacheslav Solovyov, used the word "fissile" when talking about the accident in an interview with a local TV station. Several of those seriously injured in the accident were brought to hospitals in Arkhangelsk and Moscow. Ten of the doctors who treated the injured are now reported to have been sent to a special clinic in Moscow for medical treatment.

Nyonoksa Vkontakte