The Mercury News

State TV warns ‘millions’ could die from coronaviru­s

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DUBAI, UNITED ARAB EMIRATES >> Iran’s state television has issued its most drastic warning so far about the new coronaviru­s, saying the outbreak could kill “millions” in the Islamic Republic if the public keeps traveling and ignoring health guidance.

The warning came in a bulletin broadcast on Tuesday afternoon.

Roughly nine out of 10 of the over 18,000 cases of the new virus confirmed across the Middle East come from Iran, where authoritie­s denied for days the risk the outbreak posed. Officials have now implemente­d new checks for people trying to leave major cities ahead of Nowruz, the Persian New Year, on Friday, but have hesitated to quarantine the areas.

That’s even as the death toll in Iran saw another 13% increase Tuesday. Health Ministry spokesman Kianoush Jahanpour said the virus had killed 135 more people to raise the total to 988 amid over 16,000 cases.

Late on Monday night, angry crowds stormed into the courtyards of Mashhad’s Imam Reza shrine and Qom’s Fatima Masumeh shrine. Crowds typically pray there 24 hours a day, seven days a week, touching and kissing the shrine. That’s worried health officials, who for weeks ordered Iran’s Shiite clergy to close them.

Earlier on Monday, the state TV had announced the shrines’ closure, sparking the demonstrat­ions.

“We are here to say that Tehran is damn wrong to do that!” one Shiite cleric shouted at the shrine in Mashhad, according to online video. Others joined him in chanting: “The health minister is damn wrong to do that, the president is damn wrong to do that!”

Police later dispersed the crowds, state media reported. Religious authoritie­s and a prominent Qom seminary called the demonstrat­ion an “insult” to the shrine in a statement, urging the faithful to rely on “wisdom and patience” amid the closure.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A cleric and a woman pray behind a closed door of Masoume shrine in the city of Qom, Iran, some 80miles south of the capital Tehran, on Monday.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A cleric and a woman pray behind a closed door of Masoume shrine in the city of Qom, Iran, some 80miles south of the capital Tehran, on Monday.

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