A scene of devastation in Minab, Iran, as parents waited to know the fate of their young daughters after the bombing of a girls’ elementary school killed over 100.

Feb. 28, 2026
[eyewitness accounts from Minab and Tehran]

Mohammed Shariatmadar stood outside the wreckage of the Shajareh Tayyiba girls’ elementary school in Minab, in southern Iran on Saturday morning, unable to process what he was seeing. His six year-old daughter, Sara, a second grade student, was among dozens of girls killed when the school was bombed in the first few hours of the war launched by the U.S. and Israel on Iran.

In the immediate aftermath of the strike he remained standing in the shade of a cracked wall, staring at the ground and ignoring the commotion around him. He didn’t approach the building, which had been sealed off, but he didn’t move away either. His hands knotted together, then separated, then knotted again, in a repeated motion. Every time a paramedic emerged or an ambulance moved, he quickly raised his head, then returned to staring at the ground. He asked no one a direct question. He was only waiting for his daughter’s name to be called.

When families were finally directed to a gathering point to receive the bodies of their children, he slowly moved forward. When asked if he needed help, he shook his head silently and waited for his daughter’s body to be brought out.

  • Pissed@lemmy.ml
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    4 hours ago

    I really don’t know a state that isn’t somehow following the European settler colonial model of resource extraction and capital accumulation, there are states that try to invest in more sustainable ways to keep that process going but I can’t help but feel like the way empires developed on the Eurasian landmass was toxic and we’ve never really broken away from it. I’m looking forward to reading Fosters book on Epicurus and Marx, I love the idea of the garden.