Iranian death toll climbs in twin quakes
Iranian-Canadian urges donations to Red Cross
Iran Monday raised its earthquake death toll to 306, a day after rescuers called off the search for survivors from the rubble of their homes in the country's northwest, state media reported.
Health Minister Marzieh Vahid Dastjerdi told a session of parliament that the number jumped by about 50 after victims expired in the hospital. More than 3,000 people were injured in the twin earthquakes that struck two days ago, she added in comments broadcast on state radio.
Meanwhile Iran's Red Crescent Society said the country does not need any foreign aid.
Iranian-Canadian Polad Zahedi has family in the quake area. He says people need international help despite what the Iranian authorities say. Zahedi has been in contact with at least one person from the region.
"They need bread …when they are asking for bread, that means they have absolutely nothing to eat," he told CBC News Network Monday.
"They need drinking water. They ran out of their houses barefoot. They do not have shoes to wear to help other people."
Zahedi says people should donate to the Red Cross, which has pledged to funnel the funds to its sister organization, the Red Crescent, regardless of any official proclamations that Iran doesn’t need outside help.
219 women, children among dead
In one hamlet visited by AP Television News near the village of Bajeh Baj, almost 21 kilometres west of one of the epicenters, furniture peeked out from under piles of bricks and collapsed roof timbers while men sorted through debris, trying to salvage what little was left of their households.
Residents say the earthquake killed 35 people living in the simple dwellings surrounded by mountains. Dried earth was left split wide open from the force of the shock, which cut some houses in two and left the wall of one standing only where it was propped up by a refrigerator.
The death toll included some 219 women and children, Dastjerdi said, adding that around 2,000 injured people had been released from hospitals soon after the quake since they had only minor injuries.
Dastjerdi said her ministry has deployed scores of ambulances and medics to the region but still needs helicopters to transfer seriously injured people quickly.
Authorities say old, heavy roofs without frames were largely responsible for the death toll in the rural areas.
Scores of aftershocks have coursed through the region since the 6.4 and 6.3 magnitude quakes hit the area, home to some 300,000 people in a 6,000-square-kilometre borderland near Azerbaijan and Armenia.
The quakes hit the towns of Ahar, Haris and Varzaqan in East Azerbaijan province. At least 12 villages were totally levelled, and 425 others sustained damage ranging from 50 to 80 per cent, state TV and news agencies reported.
Many roads and other infrastructure were heavily damaged. State TV showed relief workers distributing tents and helping survivors, mainly in rural areas.
Still no request for foreign aid
Spokesman Pouya Hajian of Iran's Red Crescent told semi-official ISNA news agency that the International federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent, UNICEF, Turkey, Taiwan, Singapore, Germany and many embassies in Tehran had offered help but that the Iranian Red Crescent is able to support the quake-stricken areas.
The head of Red Crescent Society of in the quake-struck province also said international aid was not needed.
The ISNA report added that Iran has sent back a rescue team from Turkey that had arrived in the region without advance co-ordination.
Iran is located on seismic fault lines and is prone to earthquakes. In 2003, some 26,000 people were killed by a 6.6 magnitude quake that flattened the historic southeastern city of Bam.
U.S. offers assistance
U.S. State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said Monday that the U.S. has not had "any pickup" from Iran on Washington's offer of assistance, and noted Iranian public statements that it did not need outside aid.
"Nonetheless, our offer stands on the table," she told a news conference.
Nuland said despite U.S. economic sanctions on Iran, Americans wishing to provide food and medicine to victims of the disaster could do so without obtaining a special license, and certain noncommercial financial transactions were also possible.