'165 Massacred Schoolgirls in Iran -- and the Silence That Exposes the West's Moral Selectivity' [View all]
"In an era when images can circle the globe in seconds and newsrooms claim to uphold universal humanitarian principles; one might expect the killing of 165 schoolgirls inside a primary school to dominate international headlines. One would expect emergency debates, moral outrage, and relentless coverage. Yet in the southeastern Iranian city of Minabwhere Israeli-American strikes obliterated classrooms filled with childrenthe worlds most influential media institutions have responded with something far more revealing than condemnation: they have responded with silence."
"These were not combatants. They were not militants. They were children seated at their desks, pens in their hands, notebooks open before them, studying, whispering to classmates, and imagining futures that stretched decades ahead. In seconds, that ordinary school day turned into a massacre. Desks became splintered wreckage, classrooms collapsed into dust, and rows of coffins replaced rows of pupils."
"Yet the names of these girls165 lives extinguished before they truly beganbarely entered the global conversation."
"This omission is not the product of oversight. It reflects something far more structural: the hierarchy of victims that governs much of the contemporary information order. In theory, modern Western media institutions present themselves as defenders of human rights and guardians of moral accountability. In practice, their editorial priorities often mirror geopolitical interests with striking precision."
Continued at link:
https://www.commondreams.org/opinion/minab-massacre-western-silence