A powerful voice from India has risen against what he calls a ‘monstrous crime’ in Iran. Malvinder Singh Kang, parliamentarian from Anandpur Sahib and ex-head of Panjab University Students Council, expressed profound fury over the deaths of more than 160 schoolgirls in a US-backed Israeli airstrike on a Minab primary school. His response to Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi’s viral X post—showing mass graves—has ignited debates on war crimes.
Kang’s statement cuts deep: ‘Shredding over 160 schoolgirls in Minab classrooms via airstrikes is inexcusable. No military goal excuses this US-Israeli barbarity, a gross breach of international humanitarian law. Urgent independent investigation, punish the perpetrators, stop innocent slaughters now. Hearts shatter for bereaved families, lost dreams, and this ethical abyss. Basta—enough!’ The post amplifies Araghchi’s own words and image: an overhead shot of countless graves dug row by row with excavators, for girls whose bodies were left in pieces by the blast.
Araghchi captioned it starkly: ‘Graves for 160+ innocent girls from a US-Israel school bombing. Mutilated bodies. Trump’s ‘rescue’ in action. Gaza to Minab: ruthless killings of the blameless.’ The visual horror—pits like scattered dots from the sky—stirs visceral outrage, highlighting the impersonal machinery of modern death. Kang’s intervention from Chandigarh spotlights how such events fuel anti-Western sentiment, urging the international community to enforce Geneva Conventions rigorously. In an era of precision strikes gone wrong, this tragedy questions the moral compass of global powers, with calls for UN intervention mounting.