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Iran Hits Tel Aviv's University District With 8 Missiles. One Person Dead. Here Is the Full Account

2026-03-30| 2 min read| EuroBulletin24 Editorial Desk
Story Focus

Eight Iranian missile impact sites were confirmed in Tel Aviv on the night of March 27-28, including one near a university. One person was killed. Here is the hour-by-hour account.

Eight Iranian missile impact sites were confirmed in Tel Aviv on the night of March 27-28, including one near a university. One person was killed. Here is the hour-by-hour account.

Key points
  • Eight Iranian missile impact sites were confirmed in Tel Aviv on the night of March 27-28, including one near a university.
  • At approximately 11:40 p.
  • One person was killed.
Timeline
2026-03-30: At approximately 11:40 p.
Current context: One person was killed.
What to watch: For the approximately 3,800 EU citizens confirmed by European foreign ministries to be residing in the Tel Aviv metropolitan area, the attack was another night of shelter and uncertainty.
Why it matters

Eight Iranian missile impact sites were confirmed in Tel Aviv on the night of March 27-28, including one near a university.

At approximately 11:40 p.m. local time on March 27, air raid sirens sounded across Tel Aviv. What followed over the next 14 minutes was one of the most concentrated Iranian missile barrages against Israeli civilian areas since the war began on February 28 — eight impact sites across the city, including a strike near a university campus that Iranian state media described as a deliberate target and that the Israeli military described as an indiscriminate attack on civilian infrastructure.

One person was killed. Two were injured. The casualty count was kept low by a combination of effective Iron Dome and David's Sling interceptions — the Israeli military did not specify how many incoming missiles were fired in total — and by the fact that most residents were sheltering in their designated protected spaces when the attack occurred. The discipline of Israeli civilian behavior in rocket and missile alerts, developed over more than two decades of conflict with Hamas and Hezbollah, has genuinely saved lives in the current conflict.

By morning on March 28, the Israeli Air Force had already conducted retaliatory strikes on targets in Iran. Iranian state media reported explosions heard in Isfahan and in central Iran. Commercial satellite imagery published within 24 hours confirmed damage at what appeared to be industrial facilities in southern and central Iran — the pattern of cement and steel factory targeting that has characterized the later phases of the campaign.

Iranian officials, speaking through state media, framed the university strike as a response to Israeli strikes on Iranian university facilities. The Israeli military denied targeting any Iranian educational institution and produced satellite imagery in support of its position. The competing narratives reflect a propaganda war running parallel to the military conflict, in which each side is narrating the same events for different domestic and international audiences.

For the approximately 3,800 EU citizens confirmed by European foreign ministries to be residing in the Tel Aviv metropolitan area, the attack was another night of shelter and uncertainty. The Netherlands and Germany have both updated their travel advisories to strongly discourage all non-essential travel to Israel and now recommend departure for nationals who are in the country without essential reasons.

#iran#israel#tel-aviv#missile#war#civilian

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