April 1, 2026

The death of 11-year-old Alireza Jafari, the first known child recruit killed during the Iran war, underscores what rights advocates describe as a governing doctrine that places regime survival above civilian protection amid mounting wartime pressure.

Jafari, a fifth-grade student, was killed at a military checkpoint in Tehran during US and Israeli airstrikes targeting military sites, according to Hengaw, a Norway-based Kurdish human rights organization that monitors abuses in Iran.

In an interview with the state-affiliated Hamshahri newspaper, the boy’s mother said that because of a “shortage of personnel,” his father had taken him to the checkpoint. He was later killed in a drone strike while stationed there.

The Basij Organization confirmed that the 11-year-old died “while on duty” at a checkpoint on Artesh Highway as a result of the strike.

IRAN’S CHILD SOLDIERS: 11-YEAR-OLD KILLED AT MILITARY CHECKPOINT AMID PATRIARCHAL PUSH TO SACRIFICE KIDS FOR REGIME SURVIVAL—Under relentless US and Israeli airstrikes, Tehran’s Basij militia confirmed the death of fifth-grader Alireza Jafari at a frontline checkpoint, revealing a chilling recruitment drive lowering the conscription age to 12 as Iran scrambles to fill ranks. Rights groups accuse the regime of using minors as human shields, exploiting children for propaganda while exposing them to deadly strikes, in a desperate bid to preserve the crumbling Islamic Republic at the expense of its own youth. This grim confirmation spotlights deep manpower shortages and a brutal doctrine that views children as disposable pawns in a war where the state’s survival trumps all.

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