Iranians Fearful as Virus Infections Rebound Amid Eased Lockdown
While many people in Iran's capital are taking advantage of loosened COVID-19 controls, some worry about a new spike in infections in what remains the Middle East's deadliest virus epicenter.
By Ahmad Parhizi
While many people in Iran's capital are taking advantage of loosened COVID-19 controls, some worry about a new spike in infections in what remains the Middle East's deadliest virus epicenter.
"The line of fools," muttered shopkeeper Manouchehr, peering disdainfully at a queue of customers outside a foreign currency dealer in the Sadeghieh district of western Tehran.
Many in the long line stood close to one another and did not wear masks.
A traffic policeman told AFP such queues have appeared regularly ever since the money changers re-opened. People rarely observe basic anti-contagion protocols, he complained.
The government began paring back coronavirus controls outside Tehran a month ago, arguing that the economy—already sagging under punitive US sanctions—needed to get back to bare bones operations.
It allowed small businesses to reopen in the capital a week later, before permitting malls to welcome customers on April 21 and barbers on Wednesday.
At 802, declared daily infections in Iran on May 2 had reached their lowest level since early March.
But this critical daily number has since begun resurging, breaching 1,500 on Saturday and, the following day, taking the total number of confirmed infections beyond 107,000.
"The situation should in no way be considered normal," said health ministry spokesman Kianoush Jahanpour, who warned of "a critical situation" in parts of the country.
In the capital, a member of the virus taskforce warned that current health protocols could not contain the spread of the illness in Tehran.
"With businesses reopening, people have forgotten about the protocols," Ali Maher told ISNA news agency, adding that "maybe it was too soon" to return to normal life.
‘Endangering Our Lives'
The capital's streets, bazaars and malls are now bustling after being nearly deserted for weeks.
Milad, a shopkeeper in a mall, was conflicted about the easing of movement restrictions.
"All these customers coming in will endanger our lives—us who are forced to come" to work, he said.
The mall gets very busy in the evenings, noted the 22-year-old, who did not wear any protective equipment.
The COVID-19 respiratory disease has killed 6,640 people in Iran since the first two fatalities were reported in the city of Qom on February 19, according to authorities.
Deputy Health Minister Iraj Harirchi has called Tehran the country's "Achilles heel" in the fight against the virus.
Its eight million residents are densely packed together and the capital is a magnet for hundreds of thousands of workers from other provinces.
The government moved to ease restrictions even as Tehran remained at red, the top level of its colour coded risk scale.
Schools, universities, cinemas and stadiums remain closed for now.
‘Life Costs Money'
"People being careful made infections drop, but as soon as the disease was deemed less of a concern, we saw cases grow," said Masoud Mardani, an infectious disease expert at the health ministry.
The rise is "partly due to the reopening and people going out shopping," he told the semi-official ISNA news agency, while also citing an increase in travel in Tehran province.
Health officials have vowed to re-impose stringent measures if cases continue to climb, and have already done so in the southwestern Khuzestan province.
But many Iranians remain adamant that they have to work to avoid financial ruin.
"Life costs money," said Hamed. "People have to go to work since this virus has been with us for about three months now."
The 22-year-old was among those out on the streets without a mask, deeming such protection "largely ineffective".
He had travelled over 150 kilometres (90 miles) from Qom to Tehran for banking business for the private firm that employs him.
It is a trip he has to undertake every few days and says he cannot refuse for fear of losing his job.
A few streets away, pedestrians were shopping for fresh vegetables and dried fruit—mostly women or older men, but this time, mainly in masks.
"I think maybe only half the people follow health protocols" across the capital, said Zahra, a 30-year-old accountant.
"Either people don't care or don't have the patience" to wear a mask, she said.
Mohammad, a former building contractor, complained that masks were expensive and in short supply.
A disposable surgical mask can cost from 49,000 rials (30 US cents, using the unofficial rate) to 10 or 15 times that amount for the better quality durable coverings.
"They should have given them to people for free," said the mask-less 58-year-old.
But Mohammad's biggest gripe was overcrowding on buses, where red crosses marked on half of the seats to ensure social distancing are routinely ignored.
Photo: IRNA
Iran Slams US as Huge Crowds Mark 40 Years Since Revolution
◢ Iran's president on Monday blasted a US "conspiracy" against the country as vast crowds marked 40 years since the Islamic revolution at a time of heightened tensions with Washington. "The presence of people today on the streets all over Islamic Iran... means that the enemy will never reach its evil objectives," President Hassan Rouhan.
Iran's president on Monday blasted a US "conspiracy" against the country as vast crowds marked 40 years since the Islamic revolution at a time of heightened tensions with Washington.
"The presence of people today on the streets all over Islamic Iran... means that the enemy will never reach its evil objectives," President Hassan Rouhanitold those thronging Tehran's Azadi (Freedom) square.
Chador-clad women, militia members in camouflage fatigues and ordinary citizens marched through the capital in freezing rain to mark the day in February 1979 that Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini ended millenia of royal rule.
Life-size replicas of Iranian-made cruise and ballistic missiles lined the route in a statement of defiance after Washington last year reimposed sanctions after pulling out of a deal on Tehran's nuclear program.
A pre-prepared resolution was read out that proclaimed "unquestioning obedience to the supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei" and called US President Donald Trump an "idiot".
The event Monday was the culmination of official celebrations called the "10 Day Dawn" that mark the period between February 1, 1979 and February 11 when Shiite cleric Khomeini retuned from exile and ousted the shah's last government.
The state has played up this year's anniversary as 40 is symbolic of maturity in the Islamic tradition and the age at which Prophet Mohammed received revelations from God.
But despite the official festivities today's Islamic republic faces acute economic challenges as it struggles with a mix of domestic hardships and US sanctions.
'Support the revolution'
State television offered blanket coverage of the commemorations, showing marchers in cities ranging from Abadan in southwestern Iran to Mashad in the northeast.
Banners held by marchers or hung along the streets bore slogans including "Death to America", "Death to Israel", "we will trample on America", "forty yeas of challenge, forty years of US defeats".
An anchor on state television warned of hostile foreign media trying to downplay the participation of Iranians in the march but expressed confidence that "they would be confounded by the unprecedented level of attendance".
Those who took to the streets were bullish despite the economic problems in the country, made worse by Washington's punitive measures.
Former public servant Saaghi insisted that it remained paramount for Iranians to stick by the revolution.
"We are here to support the revolution," the 57-year-old pensioner, who refused to give his first name, told AFP at the event in Tehran.
He compared the US sanctions and economic hardships to "riding a bicycle when someone puts a stick in the wheels" but pointed to advances in other fields as more than making up for them.
“At the revolution's 40 anniversary we are on top of scientific achievements like nanotechnology or accurate missiles," he said.
Extensive fireworks displays were held across Tehran on Sunday night.
Before the fireworks, supporters of the revolution shouted chants of "Allahu Akbar" (God is greatest) from rooftops, recalling the protests that swept Khomeini to power four decades earlier.
Current supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei is set to publish "a detailed statement explaining the 'second step' of the progress of the Islamic revolution", his official website said.
Photo Credit: IRNA