Arab News

Iran frees 1,000 foreign prisoners over coronaviru­s outbreak

- AFP Tehran

Iran on Tuesday announced 88 new deaths from the novel coronaviru­s as the country said it had released more than 1,000 foreign prisoners over the outbreak. According to Health Ministry spokesman Kianoush Jahanpour, the latest fatalities in the past 24 hours brought the total to 5,297, in one of the world’s deadliest outbreaks.

The foreign prisoners were among 100,000 inmates temporaril­y released in several stages since March.

They included British-Iranian woman Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, arrested in 2016 and serving a fiveyear jail term for sedition.

“What Iran has done

in guaranteei­ng prisoners’ health and granting furlough to them is a significan­t move,” said judiciary spokesman Gholamhoss­ein Esmaili.

A panel of UN human rights experts last week called on Iran to expand the list of inmates it has temporaril­y released over the COVID-19 outbreak to include “prisoners of conscience and dual and foreign nationals.”

It also raised concerns about the spread in detention facilities of the virus that causes the COVID-19 disease.

According to Jahanpour, an additional 1,297 cases of COVID-19 infection detected in the past 24 hours brought the overall total to 84,802.

But more than 60,900 of those admitted to hospital had already recovered, he said, describing it as a “significan­t” number.

Iran had so far carried out more than 365,700 COVID-19 tests, the ministry official said.

The country has struggled to contain the virus outbreak since reporting its first cases on Feb. 19. Some officials and health experts in Iran and abroad have said the country’s casualty figures may be higher than those it declared.

Iran has allowed businesses to reopen after shutting most of its economy down in mid-March, except those with “high risk” like restaurant­s and gyms.

The reopening of the economy has drawn criticism from health experts and even some officials from the government.

Officials have urged Iranians to refrain from using public transporta­tion as they go back to work and lifted some traffic restrictio­ns in the capital Tehran.

Tehran city council’s transporta­tion deputy Mohammad Alikhani said Tuesday that so far 19 taxi drivers have died from the virus and 317 have been infected.

 ?? AFP ?? Iranians keep distance from each other while waiting for the bus in Tehran.
AFP Iranians keep distance from each other while waiting for the bus in Tehran.

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