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Iran Conflict 2026
14APR

Hengaw counts 125,630 structures damaged across Iran

1 min read
09:22UTC

Hengaw's 10th report counted 125,630 damaged civilian structures across 40 days of conflict, while the Red Crescent reported 960 people rescued from the ruins of Tehran buildings.

ConflictDeveloping
Key takeaway

One structure damaged for every 650 Iranians; reconstruction financing blocked by sanctions.

Iran Red Crescent reported 960 people rescued from Tehran rubble. Hengaw's 10th report documented 125,630 civilian structures damaged nationwide: 100,000 residential and 24,000 commercial over the first six weeks of the conflict . The 11th report, expected 13-15 April, will cover the ceasefire period and indicate whether casualties dropped inside the truce window.

The 7,650 killed figure includes 1,030 civilians, 189 minors, and 215 women. The 125,630 structures figure does not include infrastructure (bridges, power plants, petrochemical facilities) catalogued separately. The blockade adds an economic layer. Iran's foreign exchange earnings have collapsed with oil exports frozen. Reconstruction financing is impossible even without OFAC sanctions; with them, it is a dead letter.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Hengaw is a Kurdish human rights organisation that documents what happens inside Iran: arrests, deaths, property damage. It uses satellite imagery and networks of local contacts. It is one of the few credible independent sources of data on the conflict's human cost, because Iran has restricted journalist access. Its 10th report covers the first 40 days of the war. The headline figure of 125,630 damaged civilian buildings means that roughly one building in every 650 Iranians' lives has been destroyed or seriously damaged. That is a country's housing stock being systematically degraded. The Iran Red Crescent is Iran's version of the Red Cross, a humanitarian organisation that runs rescue and medical services. It reported pulling 960 people from the rubble of collapsed buildings in Tehran. That number refers only to rescue operations, not total casualties. The harder problem is reconstruction financing: Iran's oil exports are now blocked by the US Navy, meaning Iran cannot earn the foreign currency it would need to pay for rebuilding. Even if a ceasefire holds, reconstructing these structures is financially impossible under current sanctions.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    Reconstruction of 125,630 damaged structures requires financing that OFAC sanctions currently block regardless of ceasefire outcome, locking in a multi-decade humanitarian burden.

  • Risk

    Hengaw's 11th report, expected 13-15 April, will reveal whether civilian casualties continued inside the ceasefire window, a finding that could invalidate the ceasefire's humanitarian claims.

First Reported In

Update #67 · Trump blockades Iran on a tweet

Hengaw· 13 Apr 2026
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Causes and effects
This Event
Hengaw counts 125,630 structures damaged across Iran
The structural damage scale, one building damaged for every 650 Iranians, represents a reconstruction burden that will outlast the conflict by decades.
Different Perspectives
Qatar
Qatar
Qatar holds approximately $12 billion in frozen Iranian assets that Tehran named as the precondition for any Hormuz reopening sequence; with Oman sidelined and no agreed HEU custodian, the asset-routing architecture that any deal requires has no operational channel and no neutral financial intermediary to run it through.
Hengaw and Iranian civilian population
Hengaw and Iranian civilian population
Iranians face an internet capped at 40 per cent by hardware their president cannot dismantle, field killings that leave no court record, and judicial executions running in parallel; Hengaw, based in Norway, is the primary remaining monitor of a repression system the IRGC is deliberately moving beyond auditable records. The real toll is higher than any single monitor's count.
China
China
China supplied deep-packet-inspection hardware that caps Iran's internet at 40 per cent and enables an instant on-demand blackout, and was barred by Trump as a potential HEU custodian on 27 May. Beijing gains from Iran's continued non-alignment with the West while the DPI sale extends Chinese surveillance-technology exports as a geopolitical instrument.
Pakistan
Pakistan
Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar met Rubio in Washington on 29 May, formally inheriting the role of sole active mediator after Oman's forced withdrawal. Pakistan lacks Oman's banking infrastructure for frozen-asset routing and carries its own regional stakes, making it a less structurally neutral broker for the Qatar-held $12 billion sequencing.
Kuwait
Kuwait
Kuwait invoked Article 51 of the UN Charter after absorbing an Iranian ballistic-missile strike on Ali Al Salem Air Base on 28 May, becoming the first Gulf state to make a formal individual self-defence claim in the war. The invocation creates a legal record enabling a future bilateral defence-pact activation without yet triggering it.
Oman
Oman
Oman denied any Hormuz toll plan within hours of Bessent's 28 May threat, absorbing a sanctions warning from the country it has brokered for since 1981. The rapid capitulation preserved the channel formally, but Tehran now knows Washington will threaten its own mediator, which changes Muscat's calculus on how far it can lean into any joint-management architecture.