Skip to content
Briefings are running a touch slower this week while we rebuild the foundations.See roadmap
Iran Conflict 2026
22APR

Hengaw: 6,900 dead in first month

2 min read
10:22UTC

The Kurdish rights group broke five days of silence with its 8th war report. Buried in it: at least 1,700 wartime arrests that have received almost no international attention.

ConflictAssessed
Key takeaway

Iran is fighting two wars; the internal one receives no coverage.

Hengaw published its 8th war casualties report on approximately 28 March: 6,900 killed, including 720 civilians, in the first month of war. 1 The publication resolved five days of silence that had prompted concern about the group's operational capacity . The civilian daily death rate has risen to approximately 20 per day, double the pace of the first three weeks.

The casualty figure came in below the projected range of 7,300 to 7,800 from the previous update. The gap may reflect degraded network access inside Iran, a methodological review, or an overestimated projection rate. Hengaw's methodology has been the conflict's most consistent independent tracking, and the lower figure does not diminish its significance.

The more consequential finding received almost no international coverage. On 26 March, Hengaw documented at least 1,700 wartime arrests. More than 300 are Kurdish, detained across five border provinces: Ilam, Kermanshah, Kurdistan, West Azerbaijan, and Tehran. Seventy identities have been verified. The Kurdish concentration is not random. These are Iran's western border provinces with Iraq and Turkey, historically the regions where IRGC control is most fragile during military stress.

The pattern echoes the crackdowns that followed the Mahsa Amini protests in 2022, when Kurdistan province led the uprising. But this time the arrests happen under the cover of a shooting war, with the Supreme Leader invisible for 17 days and 93,000 civilian properties already damaged . the government that has sustained over 10,000 air strikes on its territory is simultaneously suppressing its own population. The external war and the internal one feed each other.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

A Kurdish human rights group called Hengaw has been keeping track of deaths and arrests inside Iran since the war started. Their latest report documents 6,900 people killed in the first month, including 720 civilians. Hidden inside the same report is something that has received almost no attention in international media: at least 1,700 people have been arrested across Iran since the war began. More than 300 of them are Kurdish, detained across Iran's western border provinces. These provinces border Iraq and Turkey and have historically been areas where the Iranian government has less control. the government is arresting people it considers a threat from within while fighting a war from outside at the same time. The Supreme Leader has not appeared in public for seventeen days.

What could happen next?
  • Meaning

    The IRGC is simultaneously managing an external war and conducting internal suppression in historically fragile border provinces, dividing its operational attention at a moment of maximum external pressure.

  • Risk

    Wartime suppression of Kurdish border provinces risks activating precisely the internal resistance the IRGC is trying to pre-empt, creating a self-fulfilling security crisis.

First Reported In

Update #52 · Trump wants Iran's oil; 3,500 Marines land

Hengaw· 30 Mar 2026
Read original
Different Perspectives
IAEA (Board of Governors, Vienna)
IAEA (Board of Governors, Vienna)
Grossi's 4 June Board report invoked 'loss of continuity of knowledge' on Iran's 440.9 kg stockpile after 97 days without access, the IAEA's formal finding that the evidentiary break cannot be retroactively closed. A Board censure resolution before 12 June would harden Iran's refusal to restore access.
Russia (Kremlin / SPIEF)
Russia (Kremlin / SPIEF)
Putin reaffirmed Russia's offer to hold Iran's uranium at the St Petersburg Economic Forum on 6 June, positioning Moscow as the preferred custodian even after Trump vetoed the arrangement on 27 May. The offer allows Russia to present itself as a constructive actor while the IAEA verification gap renders any custodian arrangement unworkable.
Bahrain (Government and US Fifth Fleet host)
Bahrain (Government and US Fifth Fleet host)
Bahrain's PAC-3 magazine reached 87% depletion after the 5 June IRGC salvo, with its resupply last in a Camden queue behind Qatar and Saudi Arabia. Manama hosts the US Fifth Fleet with terminal air defences that the supply chain cannot replenish before 2027.
China (Ministry of Commerce)
China (Ministry of Commerce)
Washington designated Shanghai Qianye Energy on 5 June, the first mainland Chinese firm under Iran energy sanctions this war, the same week Beijing was pitched as a uranium custodian. China has not yet invoked its Blocking Statute; whether it absorbs the designation as a calibrated cost or retaliates is unresolved.
Iran (IRGC and Expediency Council)
Iran (IRGC and Expediency Council)
The IRGC fired seven ballistic missiles at US bases in Kuwait and Bahrain on 5 June and Rezaei doubled the asset precondition to $24bn on 6 June, blocking both military and diplomatic de-escalation simultaneously. Tehran's hardliners are setting terms the civilian Foreign Ministry cannot override.
Trump administration (White House)
Trump administration (White House)
Trump claimed the uranium was 'entombed' and the deal '95% done' on 4 June, while signing no Iran executive instrument across Days 99-100. The gap between presidential assertion and signed executive action is now 100 days wide and structurally unchanged.