Iran dismisses 'rumours of 200 virus deaths'

Two women jog wearing face masks at Pardisan Park in Tehran as fear over the coronavirus spread across the country. Photo: AP

Iran on Saturday dismissed as "rumours" a report that the coronavirus has killed more than 200 people in the country, one of the hardest hit by the disease, with senior officials among those infected.



Since it announced its first coronavirus deaths, Iran has scrambled to bring the outbreak under control, shutting schools, suspending cultural and sporting events and halting meetings of the cabinet and parliament.



The health ministry on Saturday reported nine new deaths and a 53 percent jump in infections over the previous 24 hours taking the overall totals to 43 deaths and 593 cases.



It was the highest number of new cases for a single day since Iran announced its first two deaths in Qom, a centre for Islamic studies and pilgrims from abroad, on February 19.



Citing unnamed sources in Iran's health system, the BBC's Persian-language service said on Friday that at least 210 people had died in the Covid-19 outbreak.



Most of the dead were in Qom or in the capital Tehran, the London-based broadcaster said.



Health ministry spokesman Kianoush Jahanpour accused foreign media of spreading misinformation about the outbreak as he announced the new figures on Saturday.



"Given the rumours and false and contradictory content that may be published from satellite networks or media which are not well-intentioned towards Iranian people, I must say that what we publish as definitive statistics is based on the latest definitive findings of laboratory tests," he told a televised news conference.



On Friday, he accused BBC Persian of joining Iran's regional enemies in a "race to spread lies".



The fear over the rapid spread of the virus is palpable on the streets of Tehran, which were less crowded than usual with people apparently staying at home.



Traffic was flowing more freely than normal in the capital on Saturday morning, when it usually chokes the streets at the start of the working week. (AFP)