HRANA Says Iran War Death Toll Reaches 3,220
At least 3,220 people have been killed in Iran since the war began, according to the U.S.-based Human Rights Activists News Agency, which said the toll includes 1,398 civilians, at least 210 children, 1,165 military personnel and 657 people whose status has not yet been classified. AFP said it could not independently verify the figures because access to strike sites inside Iran remains restricted.
HRANA Reports Rising Iran War Death Toll
The latest casualty estimate from HRANA points to a heavy civilian toll alongside major military losses. The rights group’s figures suggest the conflict has caused widespread harm across multiple categories of victims, with children among the dead. Because the organisation’s numbers are being cited in international reporting, they are drawing attention as one of the clearest available estimates from inside Iran.
Civilian And Military Losses Highlight Scale Of Conflict
Of the 3,220 reported deaths, HRANA said 1,398 were civilians and 1,165 were military personnel. Another 657 people killed have not yet been classified. The inclusion of at least 210 children among the dead underlines the extent to which the war is affecting non-combatants as strikes continue.
Verification Limits Remain A Major Issue
AFP said it has been unable to independently access the strike locations or confirm the casualty figures in Iran. That means the numbers should be treated as reported estimates rather than fully verified totals. Even so, the figures add to growing concern over the human cost of the war and the difficulty of obtaining reliable casualty data from inside Iran during active conflict.














