• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

fundsforNGOs News

Grants and Resources for Sustainability

  • Subscribe for Free
  • Premium Support
  • Premium Login
  • Premium Sign up
  • Home
  • Funds for NGOs
    • Agriculture, Food and Nutrition
    • Animals and Wildlife
    • Arts and Culture
    • Children
    • Civil Society
    • Community Development
    • COVID
    • Democracy and Good Governance
    • Disability
    • Economic Development
    • Education
    • Employment and Labour
    • Environmental Conservation and Climate Change
    • Family Support
    • Healthcare
    • HIV and AIDS
    • Housing and Shelter
    • Humanitarian Relief
    • Human Rights
    • Human Service
    • Information Technology
    • LGBTQ
    • Livelihood Development
    • Media and Development
    • Narcotics, Drugs and Crime
    • Old Age Care
    • Peace and Conflict Resolution
    • Poverty Alleviation
    • Refugees, Migration and Asylum Seekers
    • Science and Technology
    • Sports and Development
    • Sustainable Development
    • Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH)
    • Women and Gender
  • Funds for Companies
    • Accounts and Finance
    • Agriculture, Food and Nutrition
    • Artificial Intelligence
    • Education
    • Energy
    • Environment and Climate Change
    • Healthcare
    • Innovation
    • Manufacturing
    • Media
    • Research Activities
    • Startups and Early-Stage
    • Sustainable Development
    • Technology
    • Travel and Tourism
    • Women
    • Youth
  • Funds for Individuals
    • All Individuals
    • Artists
    • Disabled Persons
    • LGBTQ Persons
    • PhD Holders
    • Researchers
    • Scientists
    • Students
    • Women
    • Writers
    • Youths
  • Funds in Your Country
    • Funds in Australia
    • Funds in Bangladesh
    • Funds in Belgium
    • Funds in Canada
    • Funds in Switzerland
    • Funds in Cameroon
    • Funds in Germany
    • Funds in the United Kingdom
    • Funds in Ghana
    • Funds in India
    • Funds in Kenya
    • Funds in Lebanon
    • Funds in Malawi
    • Funds in Nigeria
    • Funds in the Netherlands
    • Funds in Tanzania
    • Funds in Uganda
    • Funds in the United States
    • Funds within the United States
      • Funds for US Nonprofits
      • Funds for US Individuals
      • Funds for US Businesses
      • Funds for US Institutions
    • Funds in South Africa
    • Funds in Zambia
    • Funds in Zimbabwe
  • Proposal Writing
    • How to write a Proposal
    • Sample Proposals
      • Agriculture
      • Business & Entrepreneurship
      • Children
      • Climate Change & Diversity
      • Community Development
      • Democracy and Good Governance
      • Disability
      • Disaster & Humanitarian Relief
      • Environment
      • Education
      • Healthcare
      • Housing & Shelter
      • Human Rights
      • Information Technology
      • Livelihood Development
      • Narcotics, Drugs & Crime
      • Nutrition & Food Security
      • Poverty Alleviation
      • Sustainable Develoment
      • Refugee & Asylum Seekers
      • Rural Development
      • Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH)
      • Women and Gender
  • News
    • Q&A
  • Premium
    • Premium Log-in
    • Premium Webinars
    • Premium Support
  • Contact
    • Submit Your Grant
    • About us
    • FAQ
    • NGOs.AI
You are here: Home / cat / Middle East Conflict: Violations of the Laws of War Intensify

Middle East Conflict: Violations of the Laws of War Intensify

Dated: March 27, 2026

One month into the escalating Middle East conflict, Human Rights Watch has warned that the scale, speed, and geographic spread of the violence are placing severe strain on the international legal framework meant to protect civilians during war. The organization says that the conduct and rhetoric of the United States, Israel, and Iran reveal a growing willingness by all sides to ignore international humanitarian law, threatening the rules-based order designed to limit civilian suffering during armed conflict.

Human Rights Watch argues that senior officials from all three countries have made alarming public statements that openly dismiss the laws of war, threaten unlawful attacks, and show disregard for civilian lives and infrastructure. The group says this dangerous rhetoric, combined with the failure of world leaders to hold violators accountable in past conflicts, increases the risk of further war crimes and deepens the erosion of global legal norms.

Since the United States and Israel launched military operations against Iran on February 28, 2026, and as Iran responded while Israel expanded attacks in Lebanon, Human Rights Watch says all parties have been implicated in serious violations of the laws of war, including possible war crimes. The organization highlights that officials have publicly threatened attacks on civilians and civilian infrastructure, justified abuses as retaliation, and treated international law as optional rather than binding.

Human Rights Watch specifically points to statements by US officials, including Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s remark that “no quarter” would be given to enemies in Iran, which under international law amounts to a war crime because it implies refusing surrender. It also cites repeated threats by President Donald Trump to destroy Iranian power plants and infrastructure, warning that such facilities are often civilian in nature or indispensable to civilian survival, making them protected under the laws of war and unlawful targets in most circumstances.

Iranian officials, according to Human Rights Watch, responded with similarly unlawful threats, including warnings that Israeli and US-linked energy infrastructure, power plants, and information systems across the region would be targeted. The organization also says Iranian authorities have wrongly characterized companies, banks, and commercial ships as military objectives, despite international law presuming such objects to be civilian unless proven otherwise. In addition, Iranian authorities have threatened harsh repression against domestic protesters, further raising concerns about both wartime conduct and internal human rights abuses.

Human Rights Watch also criticizes senior Israeli officials and military figures for statements suggesting unlawful attacks in Iran and Lebanon. These include threats against political representatives, warnings that could amount to forced displacement in southern Lebanon, and language indicating an intention to destroy civilian homes or target areas where civilians may still be present. The group stresses that attacks on civilian leaders, unless they are directly participating in hostilities, are prohibited under the laws of war.

The organization says this rhetoric has not remained rhetorical. It reports that the first month of conflict has already seen a series of grave alleged violations, including a US strike on a school in southern Iran that reportedly killed many civilians, including children; Israel’s use of white phosphorus over residential areas and attacks on financial institutions in Lebanon; Iranian strikes on hotels, residential buildings, airports, financial centers, and commercial ships; attacks by both Israel and Iran on oil and gas infrastructure; and Iran’s reported use of internationally banned cluster munitions against Israel. Human Rights Watch says these actions may amount to serious war crimes and have already caused severe civilian harm.

Beyond the immediate battlefield, the conflict is also generating wider humanitarian and economic consequences. Attacks and threats against shipping in the Strait of Hormuz and against regional energy infrastructure have contributed to rising global energy prices, with likely knock-on effects for food, fertilizer, transport, and environmental stability. Human Rights Watch notes that prolonged disruption could deepen food insecurity far beyond the region, with the World Food Programme estimating that nearly 45 million more people could fall into acute food insecurity if the conflict continues and oil prices remain above $100 per barrel.

The full civilian toll remains unclear, in part because governments involved in the conflict are restricting access to information. Human Rights Watch says Iran has imposed a blanket internet shutdown and arrested hundreds of people for sharing footage or communicating with foreign media. It also points to pressure on the media in the United States, broadcast restrictions and journalist detentions in Israel, social media-related detentions in Gulf states, and Hezbollah’s ban on filming in Beirut’s southern suburbs. These actions, the organization says, are obstructing documentation of abuses and making accountability more difficult.

Human Rights Watch urges governments around the world, especially allies of the United States, Israel, and Iran, to publicly defend international humanitarian law, condemn violations, and ensure they are not complicit in abuses by continuing support without conditions. It emphasizes that under the Geneva Conventions, all states have a duty not only to respect the laws of war themselves but also to take proactive steps to ensure that other parties respect them and to act when there is a foreseeable risk of violations.

The organization places the current conflict within a broader context of impunity, linking it to ongoing atrocities in Gaza, Iran’s crimes against its own population, and inconsistent international responses to violations in places such as Sudan and Ukraine. Human Rights Watch argues that this pattern of selective enforcement has helped normalize disregard for civilian protections, making the current crisis even more dangerous. It concludes that the words and actions of leaders in wartime are especially consequential, and that governments worldwide must urgently intervene diplomatically to defend civilian protections and restore respect for the laws of war.

Related Posts

  • UN Urges Coordinated Approach to Middle East Conflict Violations
  • Belarus Rights Crisis Needs Sustained Global Scrutiny
  • Call Grows for Norway to Halt Tommy Olsen Extradition
  • Restrictive Laws Undermine Civil Society in the Americas
  • Americas Sees Rising Crackdown Through Anti-NGO Laws

Primary Sidebar

Latest News

Lloyds and Thriveni Take Leadership Control of Chemaf Mining Assets in Congo

Liberia Expands Digital Economy with $50M World Bank-Backed Investment

Nigeria Strengthens Privacy Laws with Meta-Backed Data Protection Initiative

EU Backed Subsea Cable to Connect Kenya, Tanzania, Djibouti and Somalia

UNOPS and Germany Help Restore Essential Services in Conflict-Affected Areas of Iraq

The Hidden Crisis of Energy Poverty in Developing Countries

Why Poverty Is a Systemic Challenge, Not a Personal Failure

India Launches ₹200-Crore MAHA Water Mission to Support Startups and Democratize Research Funding

UK Launches $86M Public-Private Fund to Restore Nature at Scale

Linking Relief and Development to Break Myanmar’s Cycle of Crisis

ACALS Project Boosts Water Access and Climate Resilience for Somali Farmers

Charles Schwab Foundation Expands Financial Literacy Partnership with $2.85M Investment

Red Sky Foundation Funds £60,000 Paediatric Heart Scan Machine for UK Hospital

Pest Management Foundation Launches Legacy Fund With Over $115,000 in Initial Donations

Exponent Energy Raises ₹200 Crore to Scale India’s Rapid EV Charging Network

Renewable Electricity Surges to 94.5% in New Zealand as Solar Output Hits Record Levels

City Therapeutics Raises Nearly $100M to Advance RNAi Drug Platform

Nicholas Martini Foundation Announces $500,000 Scholarship Program for Passaic High School Students

Centene Foundation and Home State Health Launch $750,000 Missouri Health Grant Program

Recycling Textile Waste in Morocco Could Create Jobs and Attract Investment, Says IFC Program

$42K in Grants to Support New Morris School District Programs

Meta and Google Reportedly Fined $6 Million in US Case Over Social Media Addiction Claims

The Hunt for a New Ebola Vaccine: Scientists Explain the Challenges Behind Development

FEMA Approves Over $1.1 Billion for Disaster Recovery and Community Resilience Projects

Mid Coast Council Announces Over $140,000 in Community Project Funding for 2026

EU Launches €25 Billion Mediterranean Clean Energy Hub to Accelerate Renewable Transition and Regional Integration

ILO Backs G7 Push for Quality Jobs and Decent Work Amid Global Labour Market Transformation

City of Richland Launches 2027 Funding Open House to Support Local Business, Community and Tourism Growth

Mali Approves Medi1TV Television Operations to Boost Media Cooperation

ILO, UNICEF and FAO Push Coordinated Global Action to Eliminate Child Labour in Türkiye

InvestEU Expansion Aims to Mobilize €70 Billion in Additional Investments Across Europe

Community Energy, Infrastructure, and Climate Projects Drive Local Development in East Lammermuir

UN Concerns Over Immigration Policies, Global Development, Health Risks, and Infrastructure Investments Shape Global Policy Agenda

New €200 Million EIB Funding Boosts Renewable Energy and Green Jobs in Türkiye

Brazil and ILO Strengthen Partnership on South-South Cooperation for Decent Work

Climate First Bancorp Surpasses $220 Million in Funding on Fifth Anniversary

Solomon Islands Advances Fair Wage Reform Through ILO-Supported Minimum Wage Workshop

UNOPS Delivers Critical Medicines to Remote Communities in Honduras

Human Rights Watch Urges Community-Centered Approach to Ebola Response in DR Congo

Malaysia Releases New Framework to Assess Nature-Related Financial Risks and Opportunities

Funds for NGOs
Funds for Companies
Funds for Media
Funds for Individuals
Sample Proposals

Contact us
Submit a Grant
Advertise, Guest Posting & Backlinks
Fight Fraud against NGOs
About us

Terms of Use
Third-Party Links & Ads
Disclaimers
Copyright Policy
General
Privacy Policy

Premium Sign in
Premium Sign up
Premium Customer Support
Premium Terms of Service

©FUNDSFORNGOS LLC.   fundsforngos.org, fundsforngos.ai, and fundsforngospremium.com domains and their subdomains are the property of FUNDSFORNGOS, LLC 1018, 1060 Broadway, Albany, New York, NY 12204, United States.   Unless otherwise specified, this website is not affiliated with the abovementioned organizations. The material provided here is solely for informational purposes and without any warranty. Visitors are advised to use it at their discretion. Read the full disclaimer here. Privacy Policy. Cookie Policy.