HomeIran News NowIran Culture & Society“We Dug with Our Hands”: Voices from Bandar Abbas Reveal Human Cost...

“We Dug with Our Hands”: Voices from Bandar Abbas Reveal Human Cost of Iranian Regime’s Calculated Negligence

Bandar Abbas, Iran – April 27, 2025 - Thick plumes of smoke rise from the wreckage of Shahid Rajaee Port after a massive explosion involving hazardous cargo containers
Bandar Abbas, Iran – April 27, 2025 – Thick plumes of smoke rise from the wreckage of Shahid Rajaee Port after a massive explosion involving hazardous cargo containers

Three-minute read

Bandar Abbas, Iran — April 29, 2025 — The heat of the flames still radiates across the ruins of Rajaei Port. In the chaos that followed the massive explosion at the heart of Iran’s most strategic shipping terminal, the devastation stretches far beyond twisted steel and scorched earth. It is found in the voices of the survivors — the burned, the buried, the bereaved — who now speak from the edge of a calamity that state media cannot contain, and the regime cannot explain away.

“My brother was helping others walk out. He was alive after the first blast. And now they tell us ‘God bless him,’” said Akbar Tajiki, whose brother Esmaeil is among the many still missing. “They gave us bones. They said come for DNA tests. They don’t even want to count.”

Around the remains of Sina Port Services, where the fire is still burning, witnesses describe a horror that remains unacknowledged by the very authorities who oversaw its creation. According to multiple accounts, highly flammable and unregistered materials — suspected to be linked to military-grade compounds — were stored for weeks under the searing southern sun. Then came the detonation.

“It was like the sky cracked open,” said one dockworker. “People flew. Glass tore through faces. I saw bodies. Dozens. Crushed. Burned. Screaming.”

Another man, eyes swollen from smoke exposure, muttered, “It was as if the world ended.”

Hospitals Overflow, Streets Go Silent

Bandar Abbas today is a city grieving in private. Its streets are empty — not from mourning rituals, but from chemical contamination. Authorities insist the air is safe, but residents know better.

“My lungs burn. My chest is tight. The air stinks of melted plastic and death,” said a worker who barely escaped the blaze. “We were told to wear N95s if we go outside. But even indoors, it feels like poison.”

Behind the hospital walls, families wait. Some for news. Others for bodies.

“We found no one in our house. We came here. My daughter worked at the dock. She’s gone,” a woman whispered from outside a triage unit, unable to enter. “They told me to pray. That’s all.”

A Catastrophe Concealed

From the outset, state officials have tightly controlled the narrative. Ministry of Health personnel were barred from releasing casualty figures. Initial reports claimed “a few dozen deaths.” But witnesses say the toll is in the hundreds — mostly low-wage workers, many women. Families say they cannot find their sons, daughters, husbands — many of them migrants or shift workers with no official records.

A fire commander, interviewed in the smoldering wreckage, said: “The containers were sealed. We didn’t know what was inside. It was burning from the inside out. No water reached it. We could only wait and hope the fire consumed itself.”

A report by state news agency ILNA later confirmed the obvious: the cargo was mislabeled as non-hazardous. Ghasem Jafari, CEO of the port contractor company, admitted that the explosion was caused by “false declarations about extremely dangerous materials,” with no customs registration.

The Regime’s Military Footprint

Multiple sources — including workers and independent journalists — point to the involvement of IRGC-linked contractors, using civilian infrastructure for covert military storage. According to residents and leaked reports, the materials may have included components used in solid-fuel missiles, quietly stored in commercial docks to avoid international scrutiny.

“It wasn’t food. It wasn’t textiles,” said one survivor. “It was something else. They buried it under shipping labels. And now it’s buried us.”

This is not the first time Iran’s militarized logistics have endangered civilians. But it may be the most visible — and the most devastating.

State Media: A Controlled Whimper

Even state-aligned outlets like Etemad, ILNA, and Rouydad24 acknowledged the lack of transparency. “Dangerous cargo was declared as regular goods,” Rooidad24 wrote in a rare moment of candor. Another outlet referred to the cover-up as a “systemic failure” rooted in “conflict of declarations” and non-enforcement of basic safety protocols.

Yet, no one in official channels dares mention the IRGC’s name.

Instead, the regime has scrambled to manage optics. Spokespeople blame “clerical errors,” promise “investigations,” and launch committees to find scapegoats. Meanwhile, mass funerals unfold, and the silence of death is broken only by shouts of rage.

A Nation in Mourning — and in Protest

From Bushehr to Rasht, Marivan to Isfahan, vigils have spread. Truckers hung banners in mourning. Musicians canceled festivals. In Behesht Zahra Cemetery and across improvised graveyards near Bandar Abbas, entire families cry over unnamed bodies.

“It is time,” one man cried in a viral clip. “Time to rise. Time to tear out the roots of this cruel regime.”

What happened in Bandar Abbas was not just an accident — it was a consequence. A consequence of a regime that has long viewed militarism, secrecy, and suppression not as risks, but as governing tools.

In prioritizing weapons over welfare, concealment over safety, and impunity over accountability, the Iranian authorities have now reaped the inevitable: a disaster of their own making, borne by the very people they claim to defend.

For Iran’s younger generation — the ones burying parents and friends this week — Bandar Abbas may become a turning point. Not just a wound, but a warning. A final indictment of a regime that can no longer distinguish between defending the nation and destroying it.