Iran's Health Ministry reported 1,444 killed and 18,551 injured as of Day 14, with victims aged from 8 months to 88 years. The independent Hengaw human rights organisation, based in Norway and focused primarily on Kurdish regions, counted 4,300 dead as of Day 10, with 91 per cent classified as military. The two figures are not directly contradictory — the Health Ministry tracks deaths through civilian hospital networks, while Hengaw's higher total includes military personnel killed at IRGC bases, air defence positions, and ammunition depots — but they tell sharply different stories about who is dying.
The implied civilian figures diverge by a factor of three. If 91 per cent of Hengaw's 4,300 are military, roughly 430 civilians appear in their count. The Health Ministry's 1,444 — gathered through hospitals and morgues — is more than three times higher. The gap likely reflects different geographic access: Hengaw has strongest coverage in Kurdistan and western Iran, while the Health Ministry aggregates nationally, including from Tehran, where AP documented 9 million residents living without air raid sirens, warning systems, or bomb shelters . In areas Hengaw cannot reach, civilian deaths go uncounted; in areas where hospitals have been overwhelmed, the Health Ministry's own figures may lag reality.
The age range — 8 months to 88 years — is the datum that cuts through the counting dispute. It is consistent with what AP described: bombs arriving without notice to a population with no means of shelter. UNHCR estimated up to 3.2 million internally displaced , and Iran's healthcare system — already under strain from pharmaceutical and equipment shortages imposed by years of sanctions — now faces a mass-casualty load across a country whose communications infrastructure has collapsed. The 18,551 injured will define Iran's post-war burden regardless of which death toll proves closer to reality.
This is the first sustained foreign bombardment of Iranian population centres since Iraq's 'War of the Cities' campaigns during the Iran-Iraq War, when Scud missiles struck Tehran over a period of years. The current campaign has compressed comparable destruction into a fortnight through precision-guided air power. With the IDF now issuing evacuation warnings for Tabriz and strikes expanding beyond central Iran, both counts will climb — and the gap between them will almost certainly widen, because the infrastructure required to count the dead accurately is itself being destroyed.
