‘10 Classrooms Full of Children’: US-Israeli War Kills Hundreds of Iranian, Lebanese Kids
“Classrooms of children in Iran. Hundreds of people in
Lebanon. The ongoing genocide in Gaza,” said Jeremy Corbyn. “The message from
our political and media class is clear: Their lives are less valuable than
others.”
by Brett
Wilkins | Mar
10, 2026
US and Israeli airstrikes have killed nearly 300
Iranian and Lebanese children over the past nine days as the attackers target
apartment towers, single-family homes, schools, medical facilities, and other
civilian infrastructure.
Iran’s Health Ministry said Sunday that 198 women and 190 minors have been
killed by US and Israeli attacks since February 28, including six children
under the age of 5. The youngest reported victim is an 8-month-old girl.
Children account for more than 30% of those killed, according to the ministry,
which also said that 1,044 women and 638 children have been injured.
Overall, Iran said that more than 1,300 people have
been killed by the airstrikes, which are reportedly targeting 30 of the
country’s 31 provinces.
The Lebanese Health Ministry announced Sunday that 394 people, including 42 women and
83 children, have been killed by Israel Defense Forces (IDF) attacks after Iran-backed Hezbollah joined the war.
The US-based charity Save the Children noted Monday that the number of slain Iranian and
Lebanese minors is the equivalent of “10 classrooms full of children.”
“It is devastating that airstrikes in Lebanon have reportedly caused the deaths of 83
children… among nearly 300 children killed in the region,” said Save the
Children Lebanon director Nora Ingdal. “These are not just numbers – these are
young lives cut short and children whose futures have been forever scarred by
war.”
Israel claims it has killed around 200 Hezbollah
fighters. However, the IDF’s routine attacks on apartment towers and other
residential buildings have drawn widespread condemnation.
On Sunday, an IDF strike massacred 18
people sheltering
in an apartment building in Sir El-Gharbiyeh in Nabatieh district. The building
was housing some of the nearly 700,000 Lebanese forcibly displaced by Israeli attacks, including around 200,000
children. Local officials said women and children were among the victims.
Another IDF aerial massacre in the southern Lebanese
town of Tafahata killed eight people, including five members of the Ezzedine family, whose
home was bombed.
“This time is much worse than the previous war,”
Nabatieh Civil Defense chief Hussein Faqih told the National, referring to Israel’s
2023-25 attacks on Lebanon that killed more
than 4,000 people,
including nearly 800 women and over 300 children, in retaliation for
Hezbollah’s rocket strikes in solidarity with Palestine during the Gaza genocide.
Israeli attacks on Iran during last year’s 12-Day War
also killed more than 1,000 Iranians, including 436 civilians.
In the worst reported bombing of the current war – and
possibly the deadliest US massacre since over 400 Iraqis were wiped out in a “precision
strike” on a Baghdad bomb shelter during the 1991 Gulf War – around
175 Iranians, most of them young children, were killed in what first responders
and victims’ relatives said was a so-called double-tap strike on an
elementary school in Minab in southern Iran.
US military investigators reportedly believe the strike was carried out by US forces,
but President Donald Trump has blamed Iran.
On Monday, a group of Democratic US senators lead by
Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire said they were “horrified” by the school strike.
“The killing of school children is appalling and
unacceptable under any circumstance,” the senators said in a statement. “This
incident is particularly concerning in light of [Defense Secretary Pete]
Hegseth’s openly cavalier approach to the use of force, including his statement that US strikes in Iran wouldn’t be bound by
‘stupid rules of engagement,’ in his words.”
Multiple members of the UK Parliament have condemned
the killing of Iranian and Lebanese children. Leftist Independent Jeremy Corbyn, a former Labour leader, said Monday on Bluesky: “Classrooms of children in
Iran. Hundreds of people in Lebanon. The ongoing genocide in Gaza. The
message from our political and media class is clear: Their lives are less
valuable than others.”
“Every human being matters, and every human being
deserves a life of peace,” Corbyn added.
Zahra Sultana, who quit Labour and started the
socialist Your Party with Corbyn last year, mocked US and Israeli pretensions,
saying in a BBC interview on Sunday – International Women’s
Day – that the girls in the Minab school were slaughtered “apparently to
liberate women.”
Retaliatory attacks by Iran have killed at least 11
Israelis and wounded nearly 2,000 others since February 28, according to
Israel’s government. No Israeli child deaths have been reported. Seven US
troops and at least 15 people in Gulf Arab nations have also been killed by
Iranian counterattacks.
While the world’s focus is on Iran, Israeli occupation
forces have continued killing and wounding people in Gaza and the West Bank of Palestine. Drop Site News reported Monday that eight Palestinians were killed in Gaza over the past 24 hours,
including two women and at least as many children.
More than 250,000 Palestinians have been killed or
wounded by Israeli forces since the Hamas-led attack of October 7, 2023. More
than 20,000 children have been killed and over 44,000 others wounded. More than
1 in 4 fatalities have been children in a war for which Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is wanted by the International Criminal Court for alleged crimes against humanity and war
crimes, and Israel is facing a genocide case currently before the International Court of Justice.
Since the 9/11 attacks,
US-led wars have left nearly 1 million people dead in more than half a dozen
countries in the Middle East, South Asia, and Africa – over 400,000 of them
civilians, according to the Costs of War Project at Brown University’s
Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs.
“Every war is a war on children, and once again we are
seeing them pay the highest price for a conflict they neither started nor had a
say in,” Ingdal said Monday.
“Wars have laws, and children must be off limits in
every conflict,” she added. “World leaders must act urgently to prevent further
escalation. There must be an immediate cessation of hostilities, and all
parties must uphold international humanitarian law and do everything in their
power to protect civilians – especially children.”
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario