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Iran Conflict 2026
2MAR

Hengaw: 6,900 dead in first month

2 min read
14:00UTC

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
Oil markets / Lloyd's underwriters
Oil markets / Lloyd's underwriters
Futures markets priced CENTCOM's strikes-complete statement as a de-escalation signal and pushed Brent down 1.7 per cent to $94.71, even as the IRGC declared Hormuz closed. Lloyd's war-risk premiums held elevated because institutional de-listing requires a UN Security Council resolution that Russia and China have just shown they will block.
Pakistan (mediator)
Pakistan (mediator)
Interior minister Mohsin Naqvi carried dual civilian and military letters to Mojtaba Khamenei in Tehran on 6-7 June with no public response. The IRGC's Hormuz closure on 11 June shows the corps is acting independently of the channel Pakistan is using, making the mediation structurally unable to produce a binding commitment without direct IRGC access.
Russia and China
Russia and China
Russia and China voted against GOV/2026/40 at the IAEA Board, following through on the blocking position coordinated with Grossi in Geneva on 5 June; both states continue to oppose Western institutional pressure on Iran at every multilateral venue.
E3 and IAEA (UK, France, Germany)
E3 and IAEA (UK, France, Germany)
The E3 co-sponsored IAEA resolution GOV/2026/40, adopted 21-3-10 on 10 June, demanding Iran disclose 440.9 kg of unaccounted HEU and admit inspectors to four denied facilities. The 10 abstentions and Russia-China noes leave any Security Council referral without a viable enforcement path.
IRGC / Iran military command
IRGC / Iran military command
The corps declared Hormuz closed to all traffic on 11 June and claimed two vessels struck, overriding the MoU its own civilian negotiators were pursuing through Pakistan. The closure order used the Persian Gulf Strait Authority apparatus to convert a toll mechanism into a military prohibition.
Trump administration / CENTCOM
Trump administration / CENTCOM
CENTCOM completed a second day of strikes on Tehran, Sirik and Minab, rejected the IRGC Hormuz closure as inconsistent with observed transit, and said strikes were complete. Hegseth framed the bombing explicitly as the negotiation: the method is coercive deal-making with no stated pause threshold.