Attacks on Iranian Healthcare Facilities: WHO Verifies 18 Strikes on Hospitals and Medical Infrastructure

A sustained pattern of strikes on Iranian hospitals, ambulances, and medical infrastructure has killed healthcare workers and forced the evacuation of six hospitals. The WHO has verified 18 attacks on health sites, documenting systematic damage to protected medical facilities including Gandhi Hospital and Iranian Red Crescent centers.

Since the US-Israeli war on Iran began on February 28, 2026, the WHO has verified 18 attacks on healthcare facilities, with at least 8 medical workers killed, 55 wounded, 6 hospitals evacuated, and 29 clinical facilities damaged. These attacks on protected medical infrastructure violate the Geneva Conventions and constitute probable war crimes.

Executive summary

What this record documents

  • WHO has verified 18 attacks on healthcare facilities in Iran since the war began on February 28, 2026, with at least 8 medical workers killed and 55 wounded.
  • Six hospitals have been evacuated, 29 clinical facilities damaged, and 10 rendered inactive. Patients required evacuation from seven additional facilities.
  • Strikes have hit Gandhi Hospital in Tehran, Iranian Red Crescent facilities near Khatam al-Anbiya Hospital, and at least 9 Red Crescent centres across the country.
  • Iran's Health Ministry reports 11 healthcare workers killed and 55 wounded, including physicians, nurses, and emergency workers. Nearly 20,000 civilian buildings affected along with 77 healthcare facilities.
  • Hospitals are explicitly protected under the Fourth Geneva Convention Article 18, which states civilian hospitals 'may in no circumstances be the object of attack.' Intentionally directing attacks against hospitals is a war crime under Rome Statute Article 8(2)(b)(ix).

Timeline

Sequence of events

  1. US-Israeli war on Iran begins

    The United States joins Israel in attacking Iran, initiating a military campaign that will systematically damage civilian infrastructure including healthcare facilities across the country.

  2. WHO verifies 13 attacks on health sites

    The World Health Organization announces verification of 13 attacks on healthcare infrastructure in Iran, reporting that four healthcare workers have been killed and 25 others injured. Ambulances have also been damaged in the strikes.

  3. Israel and US intensify strikes targeting homes, hospitals, and a stadium

    Al Jazeera reports escalating strikes across Tehran and other cities, including attacks on hospitals, residential homes, and civilian infrastructure. Gandhi Hospital and a Red Crescent facility near Khatam al-Anbiya Hospital are hit.

  4. Iran reports hospitals and civilians affected during war

    Iran's Health Ministry reports 11 healthcare workers killed and 55 wounded. Nearly 20,000 civilian buildings affected along with 77 healthcare facilities. The Red Crescent reports at least 9 of its centres have been struck.

  5. WHO confirms 18 verified attacks; six hospitals evacuated

    WHO updates its count to 18 verified attacks on healthcare facilities with 8 medical workers killed. Six hospitals have been evacuated, 29 clinical facilities damaged, 10 rendered inactive. WHO regional director Hanan Balkhy notes Iran's health infrastructure is 'holding up' but under severe strain with 15,000 wounded flooding hospitals.

Analysis

Reporting, legal context, and impact

What Happened

Since the United States and Israel launched their war on Iran on February 28, 2026, healthcare facilities across the country have come under sustained attack. The World Health Organization has verified 18 separate attacks on healthcare infrastructure, documenting at least 8 medical workers killed and 55 wounded. Six hospitals have been evacuated, 29 clinical facilities damaged, and 10 rendered completely inactive.

The strikes have hit some of Iran's most prominent medical facilities. Gandhi Hospital in Tehran was struck, as was an Iranian Red Crescent facility located near Khatam al-Anbiya Hospital. At least 9 Red Crescent centres across the country have been damaged or destroyed. Iran's Health Ministry has reported that 77 healthcare facilities have been affected by the strikes, along with nearly 20,000 civilian buildings.

Scale of the Healthcare Crisis

The damage to Iran's medical infrastructure comes at the worst possible time. Over 15,000 wounded civilians have flooded hospitals across the country, placing enormous strain on the remaining functional facilities. Patients from the six evacuated hospitals have had to be transferred to other facilities, further stretching capacity. An additional seven facilities have been identified for potential patient evacuation.

WHO regional director Hanan Balkhy noted in mid-March that Iran's healthcare infrastructure was "holding up" due to its pre-existing robustness, but the sustained attacks threaten to overwhelm even a well-developed health system. The WHO has been monitoring the situation through its Surveillance System for Attacks on Health Care (SSA), which provides independent, third-party verification of reported attacks.

Medical Workers Under Fire

The human cost among healthcare workers has been severe. Iran's Health Ministry reports 11 healthcare workers killed, including physicians, nurses, and emergency medical technicians. Fifty-five additional healthcare workers have been wounded. Ambulances have been damaged in multiple incidents, disrupting emergency medical response in areas under active bombardment.

Legal Analysis

Attacks on hospitals and medical facilities are among the most clearly prohibited acts under international humanitarian law. The Fourth Geneva Convention of 1949 states unequivocally that civilian hospitals "may in no circumstances be the object of attack, but shall at all times be respected and protected." This protection was further strengthened by Additional Protocol I of 1977, which extends protection to all medical units.

Under the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court, intentionally directing attacks against hospitals and places where the sick and wounded are collected constitutes a war crime under Article 8(2)(b)(ix). Separately, Article 8(2)(b)(xxiv) criminalizes attacks against buildings dedicated to medical purposes. These provisions do not require that the hospital be exclusively civilian — even military medical facilities are protected.

UN Security Council Resolution 2286, adopted unanimously in 2016, specifically condemns attacks against medical facilities and personnel in conflict situations and demands all parties comply with obligations under international humanitarian law. The resolution was adopted with the explicit support of the United States.

The ICRC has noted that hospitals may lose their protected status only if they are used to commit "acts harmful to the enemy" beyond their humanitarian function — and even then, the attacking party must issue a "due warning" giving the hospital an opportunity to cease any harmful acts. Admitting wounded combatants does not compromise a hospital's protected status. Neither the US nor Israel has publicly claimed that any of the struck facilities had lost their protected status.

War Crime Classification

This incident receives a "probable" war crime classification because the pattern of 18 verified attacks on healthcare facilities strongly suggests systematic targeting or, at minimum, a reckless disregard for the protected status of medical infrastructure. The WHO's independent verification through the SSA system provides credible third-party documentation. The absence of any public justification from the attacking parties — such as claims that hospitals were being used for military purposes — strengthens the assessment that these attacks violate international humanitarian law.

Why This Is Classified Extreme

This incident receives an extreme severity classification because:

  • Protected status: Hospitals are among the most explicitly protected sites under international humanitarian law. The prohibition on attacking them is absolute under the Fourth Geneva Convention — they "may in no circumstances be the object of attack."
  • Scale: 18 WHO-verified attacks, 29 clinical facilities damaged, 6 hospitals evacuated, 10 rendered inactive. This is not incidental collateral damage but a pattern of destruction across Iran's healthcare system.
  • Medical worker casualties: At least 8 medical workers killed and 55 wounded. Medical personnel are specifically protected under the Geneva Conventions.
  • Humanitarian consequences: Over 15,000 wounded civilians depend on the remaining functional healthcare facilities. Destruction of medical infrastructure multiplies civilian suffering far beyond the immediate casualties.
  • Independent verification: The WHO has verified these attacks through its established surveillance system, providing credible, third-party documentation that removes ambiguity about whether attacks occurred.

International Law Violations

The following international law provisions are implicated:

  1. Fourth Geneva Convention Article 18: The explicit prohibition on attacking civilian hospitals is the most clearly established protection in international humanitarian law. Eighteen verified attacks constitute a systematic pattern of violation.
  2. Additional Protocol I Article 12: Medical units shall be respected and protected at all times. The damage to 77 healthcare facilities demonstrates wholesale disregard for this protection.
  3. Rome Statute Article 8(2)(b)(ix): Intentionally directing attacks against hospitals is a war crime. The pattern of 18 verified attacks across multiple weeks suggests intentional or reckless targeting.
  4. Rome Statute Article 8(2)(b)(xxiv): Attacks against buildings dedicated to medical purposes constitute a separate war crime charge.
  5. UN Security Council Resolution 2286: The resolution the United States itself voted for in 2016 demands compliance with protections for medical facilities in armed conflict.
  6. Customary IHL Rule 28: The customary international humanitarian law obligation to respect medical units in all circumstances is binding on all states regardless of treaty ratification.

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