Iranian Parliament Demands Investigation Into Minab School Strike Footage
Footage of the aftermath of an airstrike on a school in southern Iran has drawn condemnation from Tehran, with parliamentarians calling for the incident to be referred to international bodies. The strikes, which the US and Israel have not publicly detailed, arrive at a moment of acute diplomatic tension over Iran's nuclear programme.

New footage published by Iranian state media on 9 May 2026 shows the immediate aftermath of the airstrikes on Shajareh Tayyebeh school in Minab, southern Iran. The images, verified by Monexus via a post published to PressTV's Telegram channel, show corridors strewn with debris and shattered windows — a pattern consistent with an aerial attack on a contained structure. Iranian officials have presented the footage as evidence that a civilian site was struck without justification, a framing that sits at the centre of the political dispute now unfolding in Tehran.
The Iranian parliament convened an emergency session following the strikes. Lawmakers issued a formal declaration calling for an investigation and referring the incident to international legal mechanisms. The parliament speaker publicly characterised the targeting of an educational facility as a violation of international law and a deliberate act of aggression. Iranian state media amplified the framing, presenting the strike as part of a broader pattern of Western and Israeli escalation rather than an isolated military incident. Monexus notes that independent verification of these claims remains limited at time of publication — the reporting derives primarily from Iranian state-adjacent sources, and neither the US mission to the United Nations nor Israeli defence officials had issued a public statement on the incident as of this article going live.
Political fallout in Tehran
The parliamentary declaration marks a deliberate escalation of the diplomatic response. Tehran's foreign ministry has signalled its intent to lodge a formal complaint with the United Nations, invoking protections for civilian infrastructure under international humanitarian law. Whether that complaint produces any institutional response is another matter. The UN Security Council's record on threading Western military action in the Middle East offers little grounds for optimism, and the current composition of the council makes a binding resolution unlikely. Iranian officials are nonetheless pursuing the legal and diplomatic path — in part because it serves the domestic political requirement to be seen responding, and in part because it tests whether international institutions retain any appetite to act on yet another accusation of civilian harm in the region. The framing of the school as a protected civilian site rather than a facility with some other function is the central factual question that any investigation would need to resolve.
Regional and diplomatic context
The Minab strikes land at a moment of heightened fragility in the nuclear file. Indirect negotiations between Washington and Tehran — mediated intermittently by European capitals — have stalled without a clear pathway forward. Both the United States and Israel have repeatedly stated that Iran's advancing enrichment activities have crossed a threshold that cannot be indefinitely managed through diplomacy alone. The precise legal basis for strikes on Iranian soil remains contested, and the language used by Western officials has generally emphasised defensive necessity over any broader authorisation framework. What is clear is that the strikes represent a departure from the proportional-response calibration that has largely governed targeted operations against Iranian nuclear infrastructure in recent months. Hitting a site with no obvious military function, if that is what the footage confirms, would shift the calculus for all parties — including the Western allies whose support Tel Aviv and Washington have sought to preserve.
The accountability gap is real, even if the Iranian framing is self-serving. Strikes of this kind — on structures with ambiguous or disputed designations — rarely receive independent inspection. The footage from Minab exists precisely because Iran has an interest in publicising it; counterpart footage from the US and Israeli side, if it exists, has not been released. In the absence of verifiable third-party confirmation, both framings coexist: one centred on civilian protection and legal obligation, the other on the legitimate targeting of sites supporting Iran's weapons programme. The pattern — strikes, footage, condemnation, denial — has become familiar enough that audiences on all sides have developed learned skepticism about any single version of events. That skepticism is understandable, but it does not resolve the underlying accountability question.
Stakes and forward view
The immediate stakes are diplomatic and political rather than purely military. Iran now faces a choice between proportionate retaliation and continued engagement with the international legal mechanisms it is invoking. The preferred path for Tehran, if it seeks to avoid further escalation, is the one it appears to be pursuing — referral to international bodies, formal complaints, and a public record that it sought legal remedies before resorting to force. That path carries domestic political costs in a context where parliament has formally demanded response, and where the question of whether to strike back is now, in effect, on the table. The next 72 hours will likely determine whether the crisis stabilises into a political and legal confrontation or tips into a military one. Iranian officials will watch closely for any signal from Washington or Tel Aviv — a statement, a back-channel communication, an apparent de-escalation signal — that would allow them to stand down without appearing to have blinked. Absent that signal, the pressure to act will mount.
Iranian parliamentary calls for an international investigation remain active as of publication. The US and Israeli governments had not responded to requests for comment. This publication will update as further confirmed information becomes available.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/presstveueu/28912
- 12 MayFootage emerges of strikes on school in southern Iran as EU parliamentarian calls for investigation
- 11 MayAirstrikes Hit School in Southern Iran as Regional Tensions Enter New Phase
- 10 MayIranian State Media Publishes Footage of School Strike in Minab; European Parliamentarian Calls for Investigation