Iran Vows Enduring Defence at UN, Accuses US-Israel of School Strike War Crimes

Iranian Foreign Minister Seyyed Abbas Araghchi addressed the UN, condemning a US-Israeli strike on an elementary girls' school in Iran that killed over 160 people as a deliberate war crime. He warned that silence in the face of such injustices undermines UN values and global security. Araghchi stated that while Iran is a peaceful nation, it is resolved to defend itself for as long as necessary against the ongoing attacks. He detailed widespread damage to civilian infrastructure, including hundreds of schools, and accused the aggressors of intent that borders on genocide.

Key Points: Iran FM at UN: Defence to persist, slams US-Israel over school attack

  • Slams US-Israel for fatal school strike
  • Calls actions deliberate war crimes
  • Urges global action against injustice
  • Says over 600 schools damaged in strikes
3 min read

'Defence shall persist as long as it is needed', Iranian FM Araghchi at UN

Iranian FM Araghchi calls US-Israeli strike on girls' school a war crime, vows Iran will defend itself as long as needed at UN debate.

"The defence shall persist as long as it is needed. - Seyyed Abbas Araghchi"

Geneva, March 27

Iranian Foreign Minister Seyyed Abbas Araghchi on Friday slammed the United States and Israel for the attacks on civilian infrastructure in Iran, most notably the Minab Elementary Girls' school which killed over 160 people. Calling the actions a war crime, he urged the world to come together against the injustice towards Iran and underlined that the country would continue to defend itself as long as needed.

He made the remarks while virtually addressing the UN debate over the fatal school strike in Iran.

"Indifference and silence in the face of injustices would bring no security and peace. It would invite more insecurity and right violations. The United Nations and the core values it embodies as well as the overall human rights framework are at serious stake. You all need to call out the aggressors and let them know that the community of states, the human collective conscience hold them accountable for the abhorrent crimes they are committing against Iranians", Araghchi said.

He underlined that while Iran has never sought a war, it would, however, continue to defend itself as long as needed.

"Iran has never sought war. Iranians are a peaceful noble nation inheriting one of the richest civilizations on Earth. Yet they have demonstrated absolute resolve and determination to defend themselves against the brutal perpetrators who know no boundary in perpetrating all sorts of crimes. The defence shall persist as long as it is needed."

He slammed the strike at the school as "deliberate and intentional", saying that it took place despite the US and Israel possessing cutting-edge technology and military data systems.

"This atrocity cannot be justified, concealed and must not be met with silence and indifference", he added.

He highlighted that several other civilian infrastructure has been targeted in the US-Israeli strikes and said that in the last 27 days, which includes Red Crescent rescuers, refineries, ambulances, hospitals, health workers, water sources and residential areas. "More than 600 schools have been demolished or damaged across Iran and more than 1000 students and teachers have been martyred or wounded as a result."

The Iranian Foreign Minsiter said that war-crimes does not describe the depth of atrocities being committed against Iran.

"The aggressors' targeting pattern accompanied by their rhetoric leaves little doubt as to their clear intent to commit genocide", he added.

Calling it an "unjust war of whims" against Iran, Araghchi urged the world to act saying that the values of United Nations are at stake.

The remarks come as US-Israeli strikes continue to target key infrastructure in Iran. Earlier, US President Trump signalled a thaw in operations against Iran, saying that Iran had sought a seven-day pause on American strikes targeting its energy infrastructure, but he decided to extend the window to 10 days to April 6, however the strikes by the combined US-Israel forces continue.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Strong words from the Iranian FM. Every nation has the right to defend itself. But let's be honest, the geopolitics is complex. Hope for a diplomatic solution, not more escalation. Innocent lives are at stake on all sides.
A
Aman W
The report says over 160 children killed. What is happening? This is pure terrorism, no matter who does it. India should also raise its voice for peace. We understand the pain of conflict in our own neighborhood.
S
Sarah B
While the loss of civilian life is tragic, I feel the article only presents one side. Iran's own regional actions are not mentioned. A balanced view is needed. The path to peace requires accountability from all parties involved.
V
Vikram M
"Defence shall persist as long as it is needed" – a sentiment any sovereign nation would echo. But when does defence become a cycle of retaliation? The international community, including countries like India, must push harder for dialogue. Jai Hind.
K
Kavya N
So many schools damaged... this is an attack on the future itself. As a teacher, this hits close to home. Where is the humanity? The world's powerful nations often act with impunity. Shameful.

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