Iran, Iraq, Lebanon report deaths, damage in strikes

Summary

Officials and media reported deaths, injuries, infrastructure damage, and shipping disruptions across Iran, Iraq, Lebanon, and the Gulf.

Why this matters

These reports point to widening regional effects of the war, including risks to energy infrastructure, cross-border trade, shipping routes, and civilian facilities. They also show how quickly fighting can affect multiple countries beyond the main battlefield.

Iranian, Iraqi, Lebanese, Turkish, and U.S. media and officials reported a series of developments Saturday linked to the war involving the United States, Israel, Iran, Iraq, and Lebanon.

Iranian media said a strike hit the commercial terminal at the Shalamcheh border crossing in Khorramshahr, near the Iran-Iraq border. Mehr, citing Khuzestan Deputy Gov. Valiollah Hayati, said the site was targeted in an air attack. ISNA quoted Hayati as saying an Iraqi driver was killed and two Iranian workers were wounded.

State media also reported that a projectile struck near the Bushehr nuclear power plant in southern Iran, killing one guard. IRNA said there was no damage to the plant.

In Mahshahr, in southwestern Iran, strikes hit the Special Petrochemical Zone, according to Fars and Tasnim, which cited Hayati. The reports said three companies were hit and five people were wounded. Tasnim said the extent of the damage was not yet known.

Iranian media separately reported that oil exports from Kharg Island had increased despite the war. ISNA quoted Moussa Ahmadi, head of the Iranian parliament’s energy commission, as saying, “Following the visits carried out and meetings held on Kharg island, I must say that in recent days not only have oil exports not decreased, but they have increased.” Kharg Island is a main Iranian oil export terminal.

In Iraq, the Popular Mobilization Forces, also known as Hashed al-Shaabi, said an attack killed one fighter and wounded four others, along with a Defense Ministry member. The group blamed the United States and Israel.

In Lebanon, the Health Ministry said Israeli airstrikes on buildings near a hospital in Tyre wounded 11 people and damaged the Lebanese Italian Hospital. The hospital’s director told the state-run National News Agency that it would remain open.

Turkey’s transport minister, Abdulkadir Uraloglu, said a second Turkish-owned ship had passed through the Strait of Hormuz. He said 15 ships belonging to Turkish shipowners had been waiting to cross when the war began on Feb. 28.

Iranian and U.S. forces were also searching for a missing crew member from a crashed U.S. F-15 inside Iran, according to Iranian statements and U.S. media reports. Tehran said it shot down the aircraft, while U.S. media reported one of the two crew members had been rescued.

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