At least eight people have died in flash flooding in Iran’s south due to heavy rains, state media has reported.
“Following the floods and rains of the past few days in the southern regions of the country, we have seen an increase in casualties and deaths,” spokesman for the national rescue service Mojtaba Khaledi told state news agency IRNA.
“So far eight people have died and two are still missing,” Khaledi said, adding that 14 others had been injured.
Five of the deaths occurred in Fars province, local crisis management official Rahim Azadi told the state news agency.
A local official had said on Monday that at least two people were killed in flash flooding in the province.
Heavy rain damaged “agriculture, infrastructure, urban and rural housing”, Azadi said.
Iran’s Red Crescent has provided “emergency accommodation for more than 3,000 people, and over 20,000 have received relief assistance”, its head of rescue and emergency operations Mehdi Valipour told state television.
“Houses have been flooded and infrastructure such as roads and communication systems have been damaged,” he said, adding that more than 500 teams were providing assistance in parts of the country’s south and east.
Relief operations were under way in 87 cities across more than half of Iran’s 31 provinces, it added.
Interior Minister Ahmad Vahidi has asked local authorities in Fars, Hormozgan, Kerman, and Sistan and Baluchestan provinces to use “all their resources and capacities” to aid residents, IRNA reported.
President Ebrahim Raisi instructed Energy Minister Ali Akbar Mehrabian to inspect flood-hit areas in Sistan and Baluchestan, and Hormozgan provinces, it added.
The weather system is expected to last until Friday, an official from Iran’s meteorological agency said.
Bad weather has affected not only southern Iran but also Arab countries in the Gulf in recent days, with several issuing weather warnings.
Torrential rainfall has hit the United Arab Emirates, including Dubai and Abu Dhabi, and caused widespread flooding in the region.
Officials in Oman urged citizens to avoid heading to valleys and beaches due to rising water levels reported due to heavy rainfall on Tuesday.
Scientists say climate change amplifies droughts and floods and that their intensity and frequency in turn threaten food security.