Footage emerges of strikes on school in southern Iran as EU parliamentarian calls for investigation
New footage from Iranian state media shows the immediate aftermath of strikes on a school in Minab, southern Iran, as a European parliamentarian calls for an independent investigation into what Tehran describes as a US-Israeli attack.

New footage released on 9 May 2026 by Iranian state media shows the immediate aftermath of strikes targeting the Shajareh Tayyebeh school in Minab, Hormozgan Province. The video, verified by PressTV's European service, captures emergency responders at the site of what Iranian authorities describe as a US-Israeli attack. A European parliamentarian quoted in the report called for an independent international investigation into the incident.
Minab lies approximately 170 kilometres east of Bandar Abbas along Iran's southern coast, a region that has drawn sustained Western attention due to its proximity to strategic shipping lanes and, according to Western intelligence assessments, facilities linked to Iran's nuclear programme. The school, identified in Iranian state reporting as Shajareh Tayyebeh, sits in a populated area of the city. The footage circulating from PressTV shows damage consistent with an aerial attack and emergency crews operating at the site, though the scale of destruction and any casualty figures have not been independently verified as of this publication.
What Iranian authorities are reporting
Iranian state media has characterised the strike as a joint US-Israeli operation targeting civilian infrastructure. Tehran's foreign ministry issued a statement on 9 May condemning the attack and demanding an emergency session of the United Nations Security Council. The Islamic Republic's mission to the UN described the strike as a violation of international law and called on the international community to hold the alleged perpetrators accountable.
The European parliamentarian cited in the PressTV report — identified only as a member of the EU legislative body — called the footage deeply disturbing and said the use of force against a school, if confirmed, would constitute a serious breach of international humanitarian law. The parliamentarian called for a transparent, independent investigation and urged the European Union to pressed for clarity from all parties involved.
Verification gaps and competing framings
Western and Israeli officials have not publicly commented on the Minab strike as of this article's publication. Independent wire services have not yet confirmed the target, the perpetrator, or the casualty figures. This publication is unable to independently verify the attribution of the strike, the scale of harm to civilians, or the nature of the target beyond what Iranian state media has reported.
Iranian state outlets operate under government editorial direction, and their characterisation of military incidents cannot be treated as independently corroborated fact. Equally, the absence of immediate comment from Washington or Jerusalem leaves a significant information gap that responsible reporting must acknowledge rather than fill with assertion. The footage reviewed by this publication is consistent with the aftermath of an airstrike, but establishing the chain of command, the intended target, and the legal justification — if any — requires evidence that has not yet been made available through verified channels.
The claim that a school was deliberately targeted is a serious allegation that carries significant diplomatic and legal weight. Separately, the claim that the strike targeted nuclear-related infrastructure — a framing sometimes advanced in parallel Iranian statements — requires its own evidentiary basis, which has not been provided. These are distinct questions that should not be collapsed into a single narrative without confirmation.
Regional context and diplomatic stakes
The strike, if confirmed as described by Tehran, arrives at a moment of acute sensitivity in the broader Middle East. Negotiations over a renewed nuclear accord between Iran and the P5+1 powers have been ongoing, with indirect US-Iranian communication mediated by Oman and the European Union. Any military escalation risks destabilising those talks, a prospect that both Western and Iranian diplomats have sought to avoid.
Israel has maintained a consistent position that it retains the right to act unilaterally against what it defines as existential threats, including Iran's nuclear programme. The United States has neither endorsed nor distanced itself from reported Israeli operations inside Iran in recent years, maintaining what analysts describe as deliberate ambiguity. Whether the Minab strike fits within any agreed or tacit framework, or represents a new escalation, cannot be determined from the available information.
For Tehran, the political utility of framing the strike as targeting a school rather than a military site is self-evident. For Washington and Jerusalem, the incentive is to avoid providing confirmation that would harden Iranian domestic and diplomatic positions. Neither dynamic serves the cause of immediate transparency. The result is a period of contested narrative in which third parties — including European institutions — become important not as neutral arbiters but as actors with their own diplomatic interests in how the incident is resolved.
What comes next
The EU parliamentarian's call for an investigation is significant because it signals that European institutions will not automatically adopt either the Iranian framing or whatever — if any — alternative account eventually emerges from Washington or Jerusalem. European capitals have their own interests in preserving whatever remains of the nuclear negotiation track, and an independent investigation provides cover for diplomatic engagement without immediate commitment to either side's narrative.
The immediate unknowns are substantial. The target of the strike — whether the school itself or an adjacent or nearby facility — remains contested in the public record. Casualty figures, if they exist in verified form, have not been released by any independent body. The legal basis for the strike, if one exists, has not been stated by any alleged perpetrator. These gaps are not minor evidential details; they are the substance of what the reported investigation would need to establish.
This publication will continue to monitor statements from Western governments, the International Committee of the Red Cross, and independent human rights organisations as the situation develops. The footage from Minab is real and disturbing. What it proves, and what it does not, requires more than a single account to determine.
This desk note: Wire services had not published independent reporting on the Minab strike at time of writing. This article is grounded in Iranian state media footage and the European parliamentarian's quoted statement, with structural and diplomatic context added. Readers should treat all claims about perpetrators and casualties as contested pending independent verification.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/presstveuparliam/12345