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Iran drug and medical costs surge 70% after subsidy removal

Nov 10, 2025, 10:47 GMT+0

Prices of medicines, medical equipment and healthcare services in Iran have surged by around 70% following the government’s removal of the subsidized exchange rate for drug imports, domestic media reported on Monday.

The Daroyar reform plan, launched to offset price hikes through insurance coverage, has failed to meet its target, leaving patients to shoulder the cost, news outlet Rouydad24 said.

Rising foreign exchange rates, reduced liquidity among importers, and broader inflation have deepened shortages in hospitals and pharmacies. 

Analysts say the crisis is worsened by budget shortfalls in social insurance funds and the influence of monopolistic drug networks, which are accused of hoarding and speculative pricing.

Lawmakers have warned that continued price spikes could spark public anger and further strain Iran’s already fragile healthcare system.

Foreign currency squeeze

Last month, a leading pharmaceutical industry figure, Mojtaba Sarkandi, told the reformist daily Etemad that Iran faces inevitable production disruptions and severe drug shortages by March, as renewed UN sanctions under the snapback mechanism tighten access to foreign currency and strain supply chains.

“The industry operates on two realities,” Sarkandi said. “While up to 99% of medicines are locally produced, most key ingredients still come from abroad, mainly China and India.”

According to Etemad, Tehran allocated about $3.4 billion in foreign currency for medicine and medical equipment this year, but a 10–20% shortfall has already emerged. Shipping and insurance costs have climbed by as much as 50% since September, and import timelines have doubled to six months.

While sanctions have limited Tehran’s ability to finance imports, industry executives also blame policy missteps, from delayed currency allocation to state-imposed price caps, for deepening the turmoil.

“Sanctions may explain 40% of the crisis,” one executive told Etemad. “The rest stems from domestic policy failures, arbitrary pricing and poor transparency.”

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Water crisis threatens Iran’s stability and global standing, UN expert warns

Nov 10, 2025, 10:10 GMT+0

Iran’s worsening water crisis, described by a top United Nations environmental expert as a state of “water bankruptcy,” risks crippling the country’s infrastructure, undermining its stability, and weakening its influence internationally.

Kaveh Madani, Director of the United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health, told Fox News Digital that the crisis was the culmination of decades of environmental mismanagement and overexploitation of resources.

“The water bankruptcy situation was not created overnight,” he said. “The house was already on fire, and people like myself had warned the government for years that this situation would emerge.”

Iran is now facing one of its most severe shortages in decades, with major reservoirs and dams nearing depletion. 

Of the five dams supplying Tehran, one has run dry and another is operating at below 8% capacity, according to recent reports. The energy ministry has already announced evening water cuts to refill reservoirs and urged households to reduce consumption by 20% to avoid mandatory rationing.

“The symptoms were already present, and now the flames are undeniable,” Madani said. “We are discussing Day Zero, when the taps would run dry in Tehran and other cities once immune to shortages.”

He described the situation as the product of “decades of mismanagement, worsened by prolonged drought and climate change,” warning that the ecological collapse was now threatening national security.

“When people are out of water and electricity, you face domestic and national security problems that even Iran’s enemies, not even President Trump or Prime Minister Netanyahu, could have wished for this to happen,” he said.

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    Tehran denies water ‘rationing,’ calls it nightly pressure cuts

Ripple effect 

Madani warned that the crisis could have a ripple effect on Iran’s energy and nuclear infrastructure, which depends on stable power and water supplies. 

“If water and electricity shortages persist, any nuclear program would also be impacted,” he said. “Lack of rain means less hydropower generation, leading to both water and power outages.”

He added that the government’s continued defiance of Western powers and its resistance to reform had compounded the environmental strain. 

“If they want to stick to their ideology and fight with the West, they must use their natural resources and burn them,” Madani said. “So if there is no water, there is less resilience and less capacity to resist.”

The crisis, he said, is being aggravated by renewed international sanctions and economic isolation. 

“There were already sanctions in place, imposed by the United States, and there were also Security Council sanctions that, as you know, have been reintroduced,” he said. 

“Iran is in resistance mode, and remaining in this mode means increased pressure on Iran's ecosystem, natural resources, and water, but it also means heightened concerns about food insecurity issues and dependence on food imports.”

Madani concluded that Iran’s water crisis has become a national emergency with global implications. 

“This water bankruptcy weakens Iran on the world stage,” he said. “If there is no water, there is less resilience and less capacity to resist.”

Iranian athlete detained in Tehran over street performance without hijab

Nov 10, 2025, 09:24 GMT+0

A women’s sports coach has been detained in Tehran after performing acrobatic moves in public without wearing a headscarf, a human rights group said on Monday, as Iranian authorities continue to enforce the country’s mandatory hijab law.

The Norway-based Hengaw Organization for Human Rights said security forces arrested Hanieh Shariati Roudposhti, a taekwondo athlete and gymnastics instructor, on Sunday night and took her to an undisclosed location.

The group cited an informed source as saying the arrest was linked to a street performance deemed in violation of public dress regulations. It added that Shariati was allowed a brief phone call with her family after her detention but that her current whereabouts remain unknown.

Hengaw also said that since her arrest, Shariati’s social media accounts – including an Instagram page with about 160,000 followers – had been taken over by security officials and later disabled, displaying a message linked to Iran’s cyber police. 

In recent weeks, senior Iranian officials have repeated calls for stricter enforcement of hijab laws. Iran’s Prosecutor-General Mohammad Movahedi-Azad said on Monday that observing Islamic dress codes was a religious duty and that prosecutors were obliged to act firmly against noncompliance.

Earlier this month, Esfahan’s provincial judiciary chief also urged legal action against what he described as “immodest public behavior.”

Iranian clerics and some government figures have defended the hijab law as a social and religious necessity, while critics say it has become a symbol of broader state control over personal freedoms.

One in seven Iranian adults has diabetes, health official warns

Nov 10, 2025, 08:08 GMT+0

About 14% of Iran’s adult population, roughly 7.5 million people, live with diabetes, and nearly one in three are unaware of their condition, the head of Iran’s Endocrine and Metabolism Research Institute, Bagher Larijani, said on Monday.

Larijani told reporters that 500,000 new cases are added each year, warning that poor diet, obesity, and low physical activity are driving a “growing national health burden.” 

He said diabetes and its complications consume up to 15% of Iran’s healthcare spending and shorten healthy life expectancy by about 300,000 years annually.

He added that 9 million Iranians have pre-diabetes and that only a quarter of treated patients maintain proper glucose control. 

The health ministry, he said, plans to boost public awareness and expand early screening under a new “80-80-80” plan – ensuring 80% of citizens know their status, 80% receive treatment, and 80% achieve stable blood-sugar control.

Water reserves in Iran’s second-largest city drop below 3%

Nov 9, 2025, 23:47 GMT+0

Water reserves in the northeastern Iranian city of Mashhad, the country’s second-largest city and a major religious center with around four million residents, have dropped below 3% of capacity, an Iranian water official said on Sunday.

“The water reserves of Mashhad’s dams have now dropped to below three percent, and although water consumption has somewhat decreased in the cold season, the current situation shows that consumption management is no longer just a recommendation, but an obligation,” managing director of the Mashhad Water and Wastewater Company, said in an interview with the state-affiliated Mehr News Agency.

“Total precipitation in Mashhad county has so far amounted to only 0.4 millimeters, while last year it was around 27 to 28 millimeters,” Hossein Esmaeilian added.

Esmaeilian said the exceptionally low rainfall highlights the worsening state of water resources across northeastern Iran.

Shifting responsibility onto the public

In recent weeks, as the water crisis has worsened, several Iranian officials have blamed the problem on public overconsumption, urging citizens to "pray for rain" and show greater "moral discipline."

Esmaeilian’s remarks came on the same day Iran’s energy minister, Abbas Aliabadi, announced nightly water cuts across the country and urged residents to install home water storage systems.

However, the cost of purchasing and installing home storage systems is beyond the reach of many Iranians, and earlier Iranian media reports said prices for the equipment have risen since the government urged the public to buy them.

Esmaeilian said the top priority now is for residents to save and manage water use to avoid supply disruptions over the next one to two months while hoping for rainfall later in the year.

He added that current water consumption in Mashhad stands at about 8,000 liters per second, of which only between 1,000 and 1,500 liters per second come from the dams.

He said that if residents could reduce their consumption by around 20 percent, it would be possible to manage the situation without water rationing or supply cuts.

Last week, Hassan Hosseini, deputy governor and special governor of Mashhad, said the government is reviewing a water rationing plan and that, if the drought continues, regional rationing will begin before the end of autumn.

Despite repeated warnings from experts over the years, Iran’s water management system has focused on building dams and drilling deep wells instead of investing in and maintaining infrastructure, often blaming the crisis solely on declining rainfall.

Air pollution killed seven Iranians every hour last year, official says

Nov 9, 2025, 17:44 GMT+0

Air pollution caused about 58,975 deaths in Iran in the Iranian calendar year starting in March 2024, equivalent to 161 deaths per day and around seven every hour, the country’s deputy health minister said on Sunday.

Alireza Raisi said the deaths were linked to exposure to fine particulate matter smaller than 2.5 microns, known as PM2.5 — tiny airborne particles that can penetrate deep into the lungs and enter the bloodstream.

“Twenty-three percent were due to ischemic heart disease, 21 percent to lung cancer, 17 percent to chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, 15 percent to stroke, and 13 percent to lower respiratory infections,” he said.

Raisi said the economic damage caused by deaths attributed to air pollution was estimated at about $17.2 billion in 2024.

“These damages are equivalent to $47 million per day," he said.

Raisi said the average daily concentrations of fine particles in the country’s major cities are far higher than the World Health Organization’s permissible limits.

A day earlier, Iran's vice-president for science, technology, and knowledge-based economy Hossein Afshin warned about the consequences of air pollution especially in industrial regions.

Afshin said the central province of Isfahan has the highest number of cancer and multiple sclerosis (MS) patients in the country, adding that the operation of old power plants in the region increases particulate matter and worsens pollution.

“When power plants of this age operate in Isfahan province, the amount of particulate matter in the air also increases,” he said.

Khuzestan province worst hit

Raisi said Ahvaz, a city in southwest Iran, recorded the highest annual average concentration of PM2.5 at 42 micrograms per cubic meter — about eight times the WHO guideline of 5 micrograms per cubic meter — followed by Isfahan, Tehran, and Arak.

In Khuzestan province, air pollution killed 1,624 people over the past year and caused $427 million in health-sector losses, according to Mehrdad Sharifi, deputy for health at Ahvaz Jundishapur University.

He said the air in the cities of Ahvaz, Dasht-e Azadegan, and Hoveyzeh had been healthy for only two days in recent months, adding that 22,000 patients sought hospital treatment in October due to pollution-related illnesses.

Khuzestan’s deputy governor said on Sunday that schools in most cities of the province will remain online until around mid-November, while high schools will continue in person.

Calls to ban old vehicles, invest in cleaner energy, and empower a central environmental authority have so far gone unanswered. Critics warn that without systemic change, major cities including Tehran will continue to suffer both in air quality and human lives.