
US Strikes Near Iranian Children’s Hospital Force Evacuation of 211 Patients
The evacuation of a paediatric cancer ward in Ahvaz after nearby US airstrikes draws condemnation from Tehran and warnings of wider retaliation, as energy markets edge higher.
US airstrikes in the vicinity of Shahid Baghaei Hospital, a paediatric oncology centre in Ahvaz, southwestern Iran, forced the emergency evacuation of 211 patients, including children undergoing chemotherapy, on the night of 15 July. Iranian state media reported that a projectile landed near the facility, with shockwaves shattering windows and causing panic among medical staff and families. The Ahvaz University of Medical Sciences confirmed the hospital was temporarily taken out of service and all patients transferred to other centres; no casualties were reported at the site.
Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesman Esmaeil Baghaei condemned the incident as a “barbaric attack” and a “cowardly war crime,” drawing a parallel to Israeli strikes on healthcare facilities. He accused governments that selectively condemn human rights abuses of having “forfeited every shred of moral credibility.” US Central Command, which announced the latest wave of operations, stated the strikes were aimed at “degrading Iran’s ability to threaten commercial shipping” in the Strait of Hormuz. The White House did not immediately respond to the specific allegation concerning the hospital. President Trump, in a Fox News interview, threatened to target bridges and power plants unless Iran resumes negotiations, warning that “next week it gets really bad for them.”
The Ahvaz strike was part of a broader series of overnight attacks across southern Iran, with explosions reported in Chabahar, Bandar Abbas, Sirik, and near Qeshm Island. Iran’s health ministry said more than 300 people have been wounded and 35 killed in recent US strikes. In response, Brigadier General Ebrahim Zolfaqari, spokesperson for Iran’s Khatam al-Anbiya Central Headquarters, warned that Tehran would not tolerate any American intervention in the Strait of Hormuz. Iranian officials also signalled that Yemen’s Houthi movement had been told to prepare to close the Bab al-Mandeb Strait if US strikes target Iranian power infrastructure. Brent crude rose above $85 a barrel, reflecting market anxiety over potential disruptions to key shipping lanes.
The 1949 Geneva Conventions prohibit attacks on objects indispensable to the survival of the civilian population, a legal framework cited implicitly by Iranian officials. According to Iranian media, the US and Iran signed a Pakistan-mediated memorandum of understanding last month whose first clause mandates a complete cessation of hostilities, yet both sides accuse the other of violations. Washington maintains that its operations are defensive, aimed at protecting freedom of navigation, while Tehran views the strikes as unprovoked aggression and a breach of the accord.
No immediate diplomatic channel has been confirmed to address the hospital incident. Trump’s ultimatum—that strikes will continue until he decides “enough”—leaves the timeline for de-escalation uncertain. Iran’s armed forces have reiterated their readiness to respond proportionately, and the situation along the Strait of Hormuz remains volatile. The next factual step, according to US statements, is the potential expansion of strikes to energy infrastructure, a move that Iranian officials say would trigger a wider regional confrontation.
| Iranian & allied press | −1.00 | critical |
|---|---|---|
| Indian & South Asian press | −0.30 | critical |
| Arab Levant-Maghreb press | −0.90 | critical |
Iran condemns the attack as a barbaric war crime and warns it will not go unanswered.
It uses the direct testimony of the spokesman and the comparison with Israeli atrocities to legitimize the condemnation as part of a pattern of violence.
It omits any context about the US attack, such as the possible presence of military targets nearby, and does not mention that the hospital was not directly hit but only evacuated as a precaution.
India observes the escalation with concern and highlights the implications for regional stability and energy markets.
It adopts a factual tone and cites precise numbers (211 patients) to build credibility, then introduces economic consequences to broaden relevance.
It omits the strong moral condemnation and the comparison with Israeli atrocities, as well as emotional descriptions of the children's evacuation, to maintain a neutral tone.
The Arab world denounces the American aggression and stands with Iran against indiscriminate violence.
It employs emotional language and vivid descriptions ('projectiles landed perilously close', 'frantic evacuation') to arouse indignation and portray the action as an indiscriminate attack.
It omits any justification or context for the US attack, as well as the fact that the hospital was not directly hit, and does not mention regional economic implications.
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