A funeral was held after an attack on a school in southern Iran blamed by Iranian authorities on the United States and Israel. Amirhossein Khorgooei/ISNA/West Asia News Agency via Reuters Unicef (United Nations Children’s Fund) stated this Thursday (5) that at least 192 children died as a result of the war in the Middle East. According to the organization, there were 181 children in Iran, seven in Lebanon, three in Israel and one in Kuwait. “Children don’t start wars, but they pay an unacceptably high price,” the organization said in a social media post. Initial plugin text On Tuesday (3), the United Nations (UN) Human Rights Office called for an investigation into the attack that hit a girls’ school in Iran and left people dead. Iranians open community grave for attack victims In Geneva, the agency’s spokesperson, Ravina Shamdasani, stated that the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Volker Türk, defends a “quick, impartial and thorough” investigation into the circumstances of the bombing. Follow the news of the conflict in the Middle East LIVE According to her, it is up to the forces responsible for the attack to investigate the case and disseminate information about what happened. The office did not identify who it considers responsible for the offensive. “This is absolutely horrible,” Shamdasani said. She stated that images circulating on social media show “the essence of the destruction, despair, meaninglessness and cruelty of this conflict”. READ ALSO: Attack on school during US and Israeli bombings leaves more than 80 dead in Iran, says state agency Graves are opened for victims of attack on school in Minab, Iran. Around 150 people died. Iranian Foreign Media Department/WANA The attack The school, located in southern Iran, was hit on Saturday (28), the first day of attacks by the United States and Israel against the country. US Secretary of State Marco Rubio stated on Monday (2) that American forces “would not deliberately attack a school”. Israel said it is investigating the incident. Iran’s ambassador to the UN in Geneva, Ali Bahreini, had already sent a letter to Türk on March 1, calling the attack “unjustifiable” and “criminal.” According to him, 150 students died. The UN human rights office said it does not yet have enough information to determine whether the bombing qualifies as a war crime.
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War in the Middle East killed 192 children, according to Unicef
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