Debris marked with the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO) logo and national emblem was found on an uninhabited island near L. Kunahandhoo in the Maldives on February 12, 2026. The debris is believed to be from the Payload Fairing of ISRO's Launch Vehicle Mark-3 (LVM-3). Local Maldives media also reported parts of the debris washing ashore. The debris fell on an uninhabited island, causing no harm to people or property. According to indianspaceflight.in, a website tracking Indian space and aerospace progress, the debris likely came from the LVM3-M6 mission. They posted on X, “A PLF (Payload Fairing) has washed up on an uninhabited island near L. Kunahandhoo, #maldives (found February 12, 2026). The @isro logo’s position below the national emblem suggests it is likely from the LVM3-M6 launch. This follows a similar recovery on December 28, 2025, in Sri Lanka (Trincomalee), which also appeared to be from the same mission.” ISRO launched the LVM3-M6 / BlueBird Block-2 mission on December 19, 2025. This was a commercial mission to launch the BlueBird Block-2 communication satellite for AST SpaceMobile, U.S.A. Earlier on November 2, ISRO also used the LVM-3 to launch the CMS-03 communication satellite. The LVM3 is ISRO's heaviest rocket. It has three stages: two solid strap-on motors, a liquid core stage, and a cryogenic upper stage. ISRO has not yet officially confirmed if the debris are from its launch vehicle.