Iran Unveils Chilling UN Dossier Detailing Israeli War Crimes Against Women and Children

Monday, July 21, 2025  Read time1 min

SAEDNEWS: Iran’s Permanent Mission to the UN has formally submitted a detailed report on the killing of 132 women and 45 children during last month’s 12‑day Israeli assault, urging the Security Council to break its silence and end “structural impunity.”

Iran Unveils Chilling UN Dossier Detailing Israeli War Crimes Against Women and Children

According to Saed News, Iran’s Permanent Mission to the United Nations lodged a comprehensive dossier with the UN Secretary‑General and Security Council president on July 20, documenting war crimes committed by Israel between June 13 and June 24, 2025. The submission, which the mission requested be registered as an official Security Council paper, details 1,100 civilian fatalities—among them 132 women and 45 children—and more than 5,750 wounded, the vast majority in their homes, schools or workplaces.

The report accuses Israeli forces of deliberately targeting civilian infrastructure, including the Hakim Children’s Hospital, multiple kindergartens, public parks, media offices such as the IRIB headquarters in Tehran (where three workers were killed), and nuclear facilities under IAEA supervision. It also highlights the complete annihilation of several families—among them the Seddiqi Saber, Zakerian, Sadati Aramaki and Niyazmand households—and calls out the United States and certain Western governments for providing the “military, intelligence and diplomatic cover” that enabled these strikes.

In its cover letter, the mission decries the assault as a flagrant breach of the UN Charter, the Geneva Conventions and the Nuclear Non‑Proliferation Treaty, and urges the Security Council to take “decisive measures” against those responsible. The dossier has also been shared with the UN Special Representative for Children and Armed Conflict and UNICEF.

Drawing parallels to Israel’s conduct in Gaza—where a binding ICJ provisional ruling has been ignored—the letter warns that Western‑backed impunity has rendered global justice mechanisms ineffective, allowing war crimes to continue unpunished. It concludes by calling on the international community to act “before more innocent lives are lost.”