Bangkok Post

Iran rejects help from ‘foreign forces’ as deaths rise

-

TEHRAN: A senior Iranian official on Tuesday ruled out help from “foreign forces” to deal with the coronaviru­s epidemic after an offer from a France-based medical charity, as the country’s death toll from the illness neared 2,000.

“Due to Iran’s national mobilisati­on against the virus and the full use of the medical capacity of the armed forces, it is not necessary for now for hospital beds to be set up by foreign forces, and their presence is ruled out,” Alireza Vahabzadeh, advisor to Iran’s health minister, said on Twitter.

Doctors Without Borders (MSF) had said on Sunday that it planned to send a nine-member team and equipment to set up a 50-bed hospital, stirring opposition from ultra-conservati­ve circles in the Islamic republic who charged that MSF staff would serve as “spies”.

Health ministry spokesman Kianoush Jahanpour earlier said a record 1,762 new cases have been confirmed in Iran over the past 24 hours and 24,811 people are now known to have been infected with the new coronaviru­s.

He announced 122 new deaths from the virus, raising the official toll to 1,934 in one of the world’s worst hit countries.

In a statement, MSF said it had obtained the necessary permission­s from the Iranian authoritie­s, and voiced its “incomprehe­nsion” at its offer of help being rejected.

Two cargo planes had already arrived in Tehran carrying the necessary equipment to build the facility, it added, while “an internatio­nal team of nine people, including two intensive care doctors, had already arrived in Esfahan, where they were welcomed by the local health authoritie­s”.

The NGO said it was ready “to rapidly redeploy its emergency team and treatment capacity elsewhere in Iran, or to quickly transfer them to other countries in the region, where they are urgently needed”.

Iran has the fourth highest official death toll from the coronaviru­s after Italy, China and Spain but, unlike those countries, it has yet to impose any lockdown on its citizens.

On the contrary, the country is in the midst of the two-week Persian New Year holiday when the country’s roads fill with people visiting family.

Despite the authoritie­s’ appeals for people to stay home and the closure of shopping and leisure centres, many people have taken to the roads as usual this year. Mr Jahanpour, however, announced that when government offices reopen next Tuesday, many civil servants will be working from home.

“Only around a third of government staff are authorised to work in the office and only for administra­tive tasks vital to the public,” he said, adding that all offices would practise “social distancing”.

Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has urged Iranians to follow state instructio­ns “so that Almighty God will put an end to this calamity for the Iranian people, for all Muslim nations and for all mankind”.

 ??  ?? Khamenei: ‘God will end calamity’
Khamenei: ‘God will end calamity’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand