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Who bombed a girls’ school in Iran? A visual investigation

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A CBC News visual investigation of new satellite imagery and social media footage suggests the bombing of an Iranian elementary school on Saturday was the result of a precision airstrike on a military complex immediately adjacent to the building.

The strike, which killed at least 165 people, mostly children, according to Iranian state TV, occurred on Saturday, during the first wave of U.S. and Israeli operations against Iran. Shortly after, several videos appeared showing a girls’ school in Minab largely destroyed.

While the facility was functioning as a school, CBC News has confirmed a previous New York Times report stating the building was once part of an Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) base.

People search in the rubble of a building.
People and rescue forces work following a reported strike on a school in Minab, Iran, on Saturday. (Abbas Zakeri/Mehr News/The Associated Press)

Almost immediately after the bombing, there were competing narratives about who struck the school — and whether it was intentional — from people on social media and from official sources. Iranian state media said it was a “brutal attack by the American-Zionist enemy.” Others, such as social media posts, suggested it was a failed Iranian missile that hit the school.

A series of images with people grieving after a bombing.
The post reads: ‘Preparation of the bodies of martyrs from Minab School for burial. The pure bodies of 165 martyrs from the brutal attack by American-Zionist enemy will be carried for burial on Tuesday by the resilient and revolutionary people of Minab.’ (IRNA_1313/Telegram)

CBC’s visual investigations team reviewed and verified multiple videos from the scene showing several distinct smoke plumes, indicating the area was hit more than once. This was confirmed by satellite imagery released Wednesday by Planet Labs, which revealed multiple impact craters within the complex.

“It was precise targeting of a military facility for the IRGC,” said Yousef Riazi, a military researcher at Factnameh, an Iranian fact-checking group out of Toronto. “According to satellite images, the impacts shows a pattern of precision guided munitions … there shouldn’t be any mistakes.”

He says the fact a school was struck shows it was “either the fault of a weapons system or a huge mistake CENTCOM made with intelligence gathering.”

Three photos showing smoke rising from buildings.
Social media footage shows multiple plumes of smoke in the area around the school. The middle image shows the school shortly after the bombing. (Iran/X, Iranintl/X)

According to the Washington D.C.-based Middle East Institute, the site houses the 16th Assef Coastal Missile group, as well as Martyr Absalan Specialized Clinic, a part of the Medical Command of the IRGC navy. The unit is a component of the Saheb al-Zaman 1st Naval District, a strategic command that monitors and controls traffic through the Strait of Hormuz.

“This missile complex belongs to the IRGC navy and operates in the field of offensive naval cruise and ballistic missiles,” said Mahdi Saremifar, another researcher at Factnameh. “This the [headquarters] of Asef Missile Group.”

Neither Israel’s military nor the U.S. military have claimed responsibility for the strike. An Israel Defence Forces spokesperson told CBC News, that an IDF strike in the area was “not familiar” and told us to reach out to the U.S. Central Command.

CBC News shared its visual analysis with CENTCOM, but did not receive a response by deadline.

A sign for a military hospital.
This sign is located nearby the school and is for the neighbouring navy base hospital. It says: Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, Navy Medical Command. (Google Earth)

According to the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS), the location of the strikes corresponds with a clear “division of labour” in the ongoing campaign. The U.S. has primarily targeted missile bases and launchers in south and central Iran, while Israel has focused its operations on the north.

A satellite image of a militayr harbour with smoke rising over it.
A satellite image from Monday shows a U.S. strike at Bandar Abbas military harbour, roughly 80 kilometres west of Minab. (Planet Labs)
Satellite imagery of a strike on a military base.
A satellite image from Sunday shows Konarak Naval Base after a U.S. strike, 400 kilometres southeast of Minab. (Planet Labs)

Minab’s location in the south, near the Strait of Hormuz, places it within the U.S. military’s primary area of operations, and lines up with other U.S. strikes on the Bandar Abbas Naval Base, about 80 kilometres west of Minab, and facilities in Konarak, which is 400 kilometres to the southeast.

U.S. Secretary of War Pete Hegseth was asked about the incident during a Wednesday news conference and confirmed they will be investigating the strike that hit the school.

On Tuesday, thousands of people gathered in Minab for mass funerals of the victims of the strike.

“What is clear is that elementary school children and teachers were killed,” said Shiva Amelirad, of the Canadian-based Cooperative Council of Iranian Teachers Trade Associations, a network of teachers’ unions in Iran.

“The place that should be safe regardless of who carried out the strike,” said Amelirad. “[We have a] human and legal obligation to protect the school and children.”

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