Iran renews calls for everyone to wear masks as number of coronavirus cases surges

Iran renews calls for everyone to wear masks as number of coronavirus cases surges
The Iranian health ministry has urged all people to wear masks in public as the number of coronavirus cases increases.
2 min read
Some Iranians are not taking adequate precautions in public places [Getty]

Iran reported 75 deaths and more than 2,000 new cases of novel coronavirus on Friday as calls mounted for all people to wear masks in public.

"The spread of coronavirus in society has reached such a level that the use of masks is necessary for everyone," said Ghassem Janbabaee, a deputy health minister.

"Continuing to neglect health protocols can lead to further outbreaks and recurrences in the near future," he said, quoted late Thursday on the ministry's website.

Officials have repeatedly urged Iranians to wear masks on public transport, including on Tehran's underground train network where a large number of commuters still opt to travel without them.

Semi-official news agency ISNA on Friday published a series of pictures showing people in public without masks in the hard-hit southwestern province of Khuzestan.

In the city of Abadan in Khuzestan, a ‘corona police’ task force has been launched with powers to arrest and quarantine people who test positive for Covid-19.

Health ministry spokeswoman Sima Sadat Lari said 2,369 new infections in the past 24 hours took the total number of cases in Iran to 182,545.

She said 75 new deaths brought the overall toll to 8,659.

There has been scepticism at home and abroad about Iran's official figures, with concerns the real toll could be much higher.

Iran reported its first Covid-19 cases on February 19, when two people died from the disease in the holy city of Qom.

The government has struggled to contain what quickly became the Middle East's deadliest coronavirus outbreak.

Since April, however, it has gradually lifted health protocols in order to reopen its sanctions-hit economy.

That has coincided with a fresh surge in cases, which the government denies amounts to a second wave, saying they are due to increased testing.

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