World April 6, 2026

ICRC chief urges respect for laws of armed conflict amid threats targeting civilian infrastructure

Red Cross president warns rhetoric and attacks on power, water and transport must not become warfare norms as tensions escalate in the Middle East

By Marcus Reed
ICRC chief urges respect for laws of armed conflict amid threats targeting civilian infrastructure

The president of the International Committee of the Red Cross called on states to abide by the rules of war in both speech and conduct after U.S. President Donald Trump threatened to "rain down 'hell'" on Tehran. The ICRC emphasised that deliberate threats or attacks on essential civilian infrastructure and nuclear sites cannot be accepted as standard practice, citing damage across the region to power, water, healthcare and transport assets amid recent hostilities.

Key Points

  • ICRC president Mirjana Spoljaric called on states to respect the rules of war in both rhetoric and action.
  • Essential civilian infrastructure - including power, water, hospitals, transport links, homes and schools - has been hit amid hostilities that began with U.S.-Israeli attacks on Iran at the end of February and prompted Iranian strikes across the region.
  • U.S. President Donald Trump threatened to "rain down 'hell'" on Tehran and warned of strikes on Iranian power plants and bridges unless Iran agreed to allow traffic through the Strait of Hormuz; Israel struck Iran's largest petrochemical complex, according to its defence minister.

The head of the International Committee of the Red Cross on Monday urged governments to uphold the laws of armed conflict in what they say as well as what they do, responding to escalatory rhetoric and the widening pattern of strikes in the Middle East.

Mirjana Spoljaric said in a statement that "States must respect and ensure respect for the rules of war in both what they say and what they do." She added: "The world cannot succumb to a political culture that prioritises death over life."

The ICRC statement addressed the hostilities unfolding in the Middle East but did not identify specific governments by name. It warned that deliberate threats - whether made in rhetoric or carried out in action - against essential civilian infrastructure and nuclear facilities must not become an accepted feature of warfare.

The organisation pointed to the wide range of civilian assets that have been struck since the outbreak of fighting, listing power plants, water systems, hospitals, roads, bridges, homes, schools and universities as having come under fire.

The broader confrontation began, according to the statement, with U.S.-Israeli attacks on Iran at the end of February and has since seen Iran strike targets across the region.

In the most recent developments cited by the ICRC, U.S. President Donald Trump intensified his public threats toward Iran, saying he would rain down "hell" on Tehran. Trump also issued an ultimatum that Iran could face strikes on power plants and bridges unless it agreed by the end of Tuesday to terms that would allow traffic to resume through the Strait of Hormuz - a waterway described as a vital route for energy supplies.

Separately, Israel on Monday struck what Israel's defence minister described as Iran's largest petrochemical complex.


The ICRC's appeal framed this as not just a humanitarian imperative but a call to preserve protections that distinguish combatants from civilians, emphasising the human cost when infrastructure relied upon by the public is targeted or threatened.

Risks

  • Escalation of hostilities and the use of threats against civilian infrastructure could disrupt energy supplies - impacting the energy and shipping sectors, given the Strait of Hormuz's role as a vital route for energy traffic.
  • Damage to or targeting of power plants, water systems, hospitals and transport links increases humanitarian needs and could strain utilities, healthcare and infrastructure sectors in affected areas.
  • Continued rhetoric and attacks risk normalising strikes on civilian and nuclear-related facilities, creating sustained instability that may affect regional trade and logistics networks.

More from World

Airstrike Near Gaza School Kills Dozens as Ceasefire Shows Cracks Apr 6, 2026 Timeline: Investigation into the Disappearance of Nancy Guthrie in Arizona Apr 6, 2026 Savannah Guthrie Returns to 'Today' Desk After Mother's Disappearance Apr 6, 2026 U.S. Democratic Representatives Travel to Havana, Urge De-escalation Over Fuel Embargo Apr 6, 2026 Spain’s Socialists Gain Ground as PM’s Anti-War Stance Resonates; Far Right Support Weakens Apr 6, 2026