| Turkey and Pakistan close borders with Iran over coronavirus deaths. 
 Ankara also suspends incoming flights as Iranian authorities try to contain outbreak in country
 
 
 Patrick Wintour in Tehran
 
 Sun 23 Feb 2020 10.07 EST   Last modified on Sun 23 Feb 2020 13.28 EST
 
 
 A police officer and pedestrians wear masks in central Tehran on Sunday.  Iran’s health ministry has raised the death toll from coronavirus to  eight people.
 Turkey and  Pakistan  have both closed their borders with Iran, with Turkey also halting  incoming flights, in an effort to stop the potential spread of  coronavirus after Iran reported 43 cases of the disease.
 
 All highways and railways were closed at the border between Turkey  and Iran as of 5pm local time and flights from Iran had been suspended,  the Turkish health minister, Fahrettin Koca, said on Sunday. Flights  from  Turkey to Iran were still being allowed.
 
 A provincial official in Pakistan and the country’s Frontier Corps also confirmed that it had sealed its land border with  Iran.
 
 Parts of Iran face lockdown as part of Iranian attempts to control the spread of  Covid-19,  which has killed eight people in Iran. “If the situation gets any worse  city staff will be expected to convert to teleworkers,” said the mayor  of Tehran, Pirouz Hanachi.
 
 Q&A How can I protect myself from the coronavirus outbreak?
 Show        The  Iranian authorities have also been fighting an information war amid  widespread distrust on social media about whether the public is being  told the truth about the scale of the outbreak.
 
 Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, claimed Tehran’s  enemies were spreading mistrust and blamed western scare stories for the  low turnout in parliamentary elections on Friday.
 
 The first confirmed death from the virus in the Middle East was  reported last Wednesday in the city of Qom, about an hour’s drive from  Tehran. The number of people on the streets of the capital has been  noticeably lower than usual, with many shops shut and face masks in  short supply and increasingly expensive.
 
 
 The authorities have introduced increasingly drastic measures  in Tehran and 13 provinces, including the closure of schools,  universities, cinemas and theatres. Public buses in Tehran have been  disinfected, and posters put up urging people to clean their hands and  not shake those of others.
 
 The city’s school system has been shut for a minimum of two days to  allow for disinfection spraying. There was also widespread advice to  stay home and avoid places where people congregate. Some football  matches were cancelled. Metro stations were not shut, but water  fountains and shops were all being closed. The council said it was also  taking new steps to dispose of waste.
 
 At the airport, roughly a third of passengers were wearing masks, but  there were no special controls on people leaving the country. Turkey,  Iraq and Pakistan have either closed borders or are imposing extra  health checks.
 
 Despite the precautions the vast majority were carrying on with their daily lives as normal.
 
 Some  of the families of those that have died in Qom claim to know of no  contact with anyone in China, prompting claims that this may be an  indigenous disease. The health minister, Saeed Namaki, denied this,  saying one victim traded in China and had travelled there indirectly.  The strain discovered in Iran matched that in China, he said.
 
 He has recommended no travel to or from Qom, as well as promising to  distribute free coronavirus packages to residents in the area, including  masks and educational brochures.
 
 
 theguardian.com
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