THE NEW YORK TIMES: Video captures apparent strike near boys’ school in Iran

THE NEW YORK TIMES: The verified footage captures one of two known explosions near a school in service on February 28, the first day of US-Israeli attacks.

Christiaan Triebert and Parin Behrooz
The New York Times
The United States President Donald Trump signals that American objectives in the Middle East conflict are nearly complete, suggesting the war could end sooner than the initially estimated four to five weeks.

At the Imam Reza Elementary School for boys in Abyek, a small city in Qazvin province, west of Tehran, Iran, security camera footage from Feburary 28 shows scenes from an ordinary morning.

Some 40 boys play on the playground. A few wander around, others linger by the soccer goal and a large group gather in a circle.

That was just hours after the first joint Israeli and US strikes on Iran, according to Iranian state media. Schools were still open.

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Then, the footage shows a large explosion at the top of the screen, where a communications tower stands on a hill.

The blast rips through the area, damaging the school.

The footage shows windows shattering. Children run, some with hands over their ears. A child falls to the ground by a soccer goal post, seemingly hit by a piece of debris.

The verified footage captures one of two known explosions near a school in service on February 28, the first day of US-Israeli attacks.
The verified footage captures one of two known explosions near a school in service on February 28, the first day of US-Israeli attacks. Credit: Instagram

Tasnim, a semiofficial Iranian news agency, identified the child as Mahyar Zanganeh and said he had not survived.

The video remained virtually unseen until it was posted online Friday. It has since been verified by The New York Times.

The footage captures one of two known explosions near a school in service on February 28, the first day of US-Israeli attacks. The other hit a girls’ school in Minab, where 175 people, many of them children, were reported killed.

No side has taken responsibility for that strike so far. Videos verified by the Times show a Tomahawk cruise missile hitting a naval base operated by Iran’s Revolutionary Guard beside the school in Minab. (The US military is the only force involved in the conflict that uses Tomahawk missiles.)

The footage from the school in Abyek was shared by the official channel of the Coordinating Council of Iranian Teachers’ Unions, one of the largest trade unions in the country; some of the group’s members have been imprisoned by the Iranian government in the past for their activism.

Using before and after satellite imagery, the Times, as well as geolocation experts, have determined that the communications tower where the explosion was observed in the security camera footage seemed to have been the intended target. The structure, less than 400 feet from the playground, was reduced to rubble after the explosion.

“We have active members in Qazvin province and in the teachers’ movement there,” said Shiva Amelirad, an international representative in Toronto for the Coordinating Council of Iranian Teachers’ Unions.

“But unfortunately contact has not been possible yet, due to widespread internet disruptions across the country.”

In a public statement, the union emphasised that targeting schools and hospitals was “rejected under any circumstances,” stressing that attacks on such spaces “were not only a violation of fundamental humanitarian principles, but also a clear breach of international law and human rights conventions.”

The US and Israeli militaries did not respond to requests for comment.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

© 2026 The New York Times Company

Originally published on The New York Times

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