Italy Pm Condemns Iran School Strike
Meloni condemned the missile strike on a school in Iran that killed at least 165 people and called for accountability while affirming Italy's non-involvement in the war.
- On Wednesday, Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni condemned a deadly missile strike on the school in Minab, southern Iran, urging swift identification of those responsible and expressing solidarity with victims’ families.
- Amid competing claims, Iran accused the United States and Israel of the attack while Washington says it is investigating and Israel denies involvement.
- The Pentagon notes that parts recovered appear to match a U.S.-made Tomahawk missile, and a New York Times analysis points to US forces as most likely responsible, recently.
- Meloni emphasized Italy's stance, saying it is "not at war and we don't want to enter the war" and called diplomacy "impossible" amid Iran's retaliatory attacks, while Italy is not involved in nuclear negotiations.
- Economically, Rome is considering cutting excise duty to stabilise pump prices as the International Energy Agency announced a 400 million-barrel release and oil surged to $100 a barrel.
13 Articles
13 Articles
U.S. investigates strike on Iranian school as the war sparks a global oil crisis
Trump, who promised to lower gas prices, is tapping the Strategic Petroleum Reserve as war drives prices up. And, the U.S. investigates the strike on an Iranian school that killed at least 165 people.
A Tomahawk cruise missile launched by the United States would accidentally hit the female primary school Shajareh Tayyebeh in Minab, southern Iran, causing at least 175...
Italy PM Meloni condemns missile strike on Iran school
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni condemned Wednesday a deadly missile strike on a school in Iran early in the Middle East war, calling for those responsible to be identified."I express my firm condemnation of the massacre of girls at the school in Minab, southern Iran," the far-right leader told the Senate.She offered her solidarity with...
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 45% of the sources lean Left
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium










