Iranian military and diplomatic leaders warn the United States not to designate the IRGC as a foreign terrorist group.
Officials in Iran's flood-hit Khuzestan province continued issuing flood warnings throughout Sunday April 7, while some reports say many residents have refused to evacuate their homes and move to safe areas.
Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei has called on Iraq to make sure that U.S. forces leave that country as soon as possible.
On Saturday April 6, Iran's oil-producing Khuzestan province was scrambling to evacuate many towns and villages as more rains and waters let out of dams threatened hundreds of thousands of people.
A new round of torrential rains are expected across nine Iranian provinces April 5-7, while flood-hit areas in Iran, particularly Lorestan Province, have suffered heavy damages and losses during two weeks with the casualty toll reaching 67 and rising.
Iranians affected by the county's worst floods in a decade have been staging angry demonstrations against what they say is an inadequate relief response by the government.
President Hassan Rouhani has once again attacked the United States for imposing sanctions on the Islamic Republic, accusing Washington of blocking international aid from reaching flood-hit Iran.
Flood emergencies continue in Western Iran, with tens of thousands of people sheltering in the open with little food or warm cloths to endure the cold and wet weather.
Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei told high-ranking civilian officials and military commanders Tuesday evening, April 2, that they should have anticipated damage caused by floods and prepared for it.
Heavy rains on Monday completely overwhelmed several towns in the mountainous Lorestan province, where forced evacuations were ordered and people in many cases had to flee to nearby mountains to escape unending torrent of floods.
Floods have demolished over 25,000 houses across Iran in less than two weeks, Hadi Derafshi, an official at the Iranian Housing Foundation told reporters on Monday, April 1.
Load more