JUDY WOODRUFF: One of the countries hardest
hit by COVID-19 is Iran. Thousands there have
the virus, and the death toll is skyrocketing,
amid preparations for a subdued Iranian new
year.
The conflict with the United States is now
never far from mind there.
As special correspondent Reza Sayah reports
from Tehran, coronavirus and that confrontation
make for a volatile mix.
REZA SAYAH: Once a year in the streets of
Tehran, Hajji Firuz welcomes to the first
day of spring and Nowruz, the Iranian new
year. Like Santa Claus, this soot-covered
fictional character's job is to spread holiday
joy, but, this year, he's not seeing many
smiles.
MAN (through translator): It's the worst new
year ever. I have played for Hajji Firuz for
20 years. This is the first time I have seen
it like this. They're not in a good mood.
REZA SAYAH: A good mood is hard to find in
Iran these days. The coronavirus outbreak
is exploding. The daily death toll is hitting
triple digits, more than 17,000 Iranians have
tested positive.
Mahmoud Sadeghi is among more than three dozen
public officials who caught the virus. The
lawmaker recovered last week. He spoke to
us by video chat.
MAHMOUD SADEGHI, Iranian Parliament Member
(through translator): I had totally surrendered
to my destiny. I even started writing my will.
I almost finished.
REZA SAYAH: Sadeghi says he's heating the
government's call to stay home. Many Iranians
are doing the same. Tehran's streets, usually
bustling with new year traffic, are nearly
empty. With the coronavirus, a lot has changed.
But here's what hasn't changed. At a time
when the U.N. is calling for global cooperation
to fight the coronavirus, Tehran and Washington
are still in conflict, still damning one another,
and, some say, edging closer to war.
Last Wednesday marked the birthday of Qasem
Soleimani, the Iranian general assassinated
in January in a U.S. drone strike. On Soleimani's
birthday, a rocket attack hit a military base
in Iraq, killing two American soldiers. One
day later, the Pentagon launched airstrikes
targeting Iranian-backed Shia militias, saying
they were responsible.
MOHAMMAD HASHEMI, Political Commentator: Things
are getting worse.
REZA SAYAH: Tehran-based political commentator
Mohammad Hashemi says, at a time when both
countries should be focusing on containing
a pandemic, war seems closer than ever.
MOHAMMAD HASHEMI: This was the worst time
for such things happen, because everybody
fear of another war in the region.
And then, in the middle of the crisis, that
Iran is trying to deal with this coronavirus
outbreak.
REZA SAYAH: Tehran and Washington are feuding
over the coronavirus too. Yesterday, Secretary
of State Mike Pompeo accused Iran of covering
up the outbreak.
MIKE POMPEO, U.S. Secretary of State: Instead
of focusing on the needs of the Iranian people
and accepting genuine offers of support, senior
Iranian lied about Wuhan virus outbreak four
weeks.
REZA SAYAH: Last week, The Washington Post
cited satellite images to report authorities
in Iran raced to dig trenches at a cemetery
in the city of Qom in an effort to hide the
death toll. The site was so vast, The Post
said, it was visible from space.
Other news organizations picked up the story,
some calling the site a mass grave.
HABIB ABDOLHOSSEIN, Press TV: Well, I was
shocked and terrified.
REZA SAYAH: Habib Abdolhossein is a reporter
at Press TV, Iran's state-funded English language
news network. He says the site was no secret
and prepared to accommodate the Islamic custom
of burying loved ones within 24 hours.
HABIB ABDOLHOSSEIN: Satellite images cannot
prove that a mass grave exist somewhere or
not.
REZA SAYAH: Do you understand that some of
the critics of the Islamic Republic of Iran
say that Press TV is the state's news network,
and they don't cover it objectively?
HABIB ABDOLHOSSEIN: Of course.
REZA SAYAH: You do?
HABIB ABDOLHOSSEIN: Of course. Yes, of course.
I cannot deny that there have been mismanagement.
Definitely, there have been mismanagement,
dysfunction in Iran and other countries. But
this is something that happens, either in
Iran or in Italy. This is not fair. They're
just trying to blame Iran and pile up pressure
on Iran.
REZA SAYAH: This report written by a local
reporter in Qom three weeks prior to The Washington
Post report announced preparation of roughly
100 graves at the same cemetery for victims
of the virus, suggesting the site wasn't a
secret.
Numerous pictures posted on social media and
the cemetery Web site also show the site was
prepared just as other graves are prepared
in Iran.
Perhaps no voice in Iran is more objective
when it comes to the coronavirus than the
World Health Organization. They neither represent
the Iranian government nor U.S. interests.
They're working to contain the virus. And
they granted us an interview.
The sign says no entry without wearing a mask.
So we're going to put on a mask. There have
been critics of the Iranian government who
say they haven't done enough, they reacted
too slow. What is your response to those allegations?
CHRISTOPH HAMELMANN, World Health Organization:
You know, two weeks ago, the response was
a bit more difficult, because there were only
two or three countries which had self-sustained
epidemic. So, there was a lot of focus on
what do they do different or maybe wrong or
not to that scale as others?
That kind of debate has vanished to a largest
degree.
REZA SAYAH: Are you satisfied with the response
here?
CHRISTOPH HAMELMANN: I'm very satisfied with
the response, in terms of the planning. The
national plan has really all the components
we are recommending a national plan should
have.
REZA SAYAH: Here, on the eve of every last
Wednesday before the new year, Iranians hold
a Festival of Fire. They cast aside bad luck
and look forward to happier days.
With the coronavirus, many celebrated from
inside their homes. For them, happier days
will come if Tehran and Washington can ever
set aside their differences.
SAGHAR SAHADJAMI, Physician (through translator):
This is not the time for politics to be injected
into the daily challenges of people.
REZA SAYAH: And share in the fight against
a growing pandemic.
For the "PBS NewsHour." I'm Reza Sayah in
Tehran.
