The protest coincided with the anniversary of Iraq's chemical attack on Halabja.
The demonstration was designed to resemble a classroom destroyed by enemy forces, with student backpacks hanging from the ceiling and benches arranged for attendees. Images of the deceased Minab students, along with artwork created by children in their memory and statements expressing a vow of revenge for their martyrdom, were displayed at the site.
Protesters carried Iranian flags and portraits of Ayatollah Seyed Ali Khamenei, the late Leader of Islamic Revolution, and Ayatollah Seyed Mojtaba Khamenei, the current Leader, to denounce the criminal actions of the United States and the Israeli regime. The demonstration aimed to raise international awareness of these crimes.
Nasrin Baaseri, a mother present at the protest who has lived in the United States for several years, delivered a message in English directed at the US president, condemning the savage attack.
"How audacious it is, how shameless the days pass in a world where those who claim to be peacemakers and humanitarian are the most brutal and heartless people of our time… How can one live in this treacherous world when the rulers of the new global order can press a button and massacre 168 children and a teacher in the safest place in the world—a school—and then, to ensure the success of their crime, launch another missile and shamelessly claim that these atrocities were committed to save the Iranian people?"