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News ID: 92016
Publish Date : 03 July 2021 - 22:11

Nation on Alert Amid Fears of Delta Variant

TEHRAN -- President Hassan Rouhani expressed fears Saturday that Iran will be hit by a new wave of Covid-19 due to an outbreak of the Delta variant.
“It is feared that we are on the way to a fifth wave throughout the country,” Rouhani told a meeting of Iran’s anti-virus taskforce, warning the public to be careful as “the Delta variant” had entered the country from the south and southeast.
Covid-19 has killed more than 84,000 people out of over 3.2 million infections in Iran, according to official figures.
Delta, first detected in India and now present in at least 85 countries, is the most contagious of any Covid-19 variant yet identified.
The Islamic Republic confirmed three cases of the Delta variant on May 5 in the central province of Qom.
Iran’s health ministry has classified as “red” -- the highest category on Iran’s coronavirus risk scale -- the capital Tehran and nine other cities in Tehran province.
The southern and southeastern provinces of Fars, Hormozgan, Kerman and Sistan-Baluchistan are also now classified as “red”.
In red zones, all shops must stay shuttered except for those considered essential, including grocery stores and pharmacies.
Authorities in Sistan-Baluchistan province said on Wednesday that they had closed travel across the border with Pakistan until further notice, although goods transport by road would be permitted.
On Saturday, Alireza Raisi, the spokesman for the anti-virus taskforce, called for “strict controls of the country’s borders”, especially those on the eastern side of Iran.
Strangled by U.S. sanctions that

have made it difficult to transfer money to foreign firms, Iran says it is struggling to import vaccines for its population of 83 million.
Just over 4.4 million people have received a first dose of anti-Covid vaccine in Iran, while only 1.7 million have received the necessary two jabs, the health ministry says.
Iran has licensed for public use two locally produced vaccines, including one together with Cuba, and is working on five more homegrown vaccines. Tehran is also cooperating with Russia on producing the Sputnik V jab.
Food, medicine and other humanitarian supplies are exempt from U.S. sanctions reimposed on Tehran in 2018 after President Donald Trump walked away from a 2015 international deal over Iran’s nuclear program.
But the U.S. measures, which target sectors including oil and financial activities, have deterred foreign banks from processing financial transactions with Iran. Tehran says this has frequently disrupted efforts to import essential medicines and other humanitarian items.
“God willing, the situation will improve in terms of vaccinations from next week,” said Rouhani.
The authorities in Iran have approved emergency use of two locally produced vaccines.
Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Seyyed Ali Khamenei received the first dose of one on June 25, his office announced on Twitter.
“We have to follow exactly all the rules we have issued for the red zones” and other virus-hit areas, Rouhani said, stressing that “if the guidelines are questioned or not followed, we will have a problem.”
The outgoing Rouhani administration has drawn criticism for its handling of the pandemic.
Rouhani is in the final weeks of his presidency having served the maximum of two consecutive terms.
He will be replaced in August by former judiciary chief Ebrahim Raisi.