Private donors drive Iran earthquake relief efforts

ERBIL, Kurdistan Region – Scenes taking place in Rojhelat, Iranian Kurdistan, are both heartbreaking images of families weeping over the graves of earthquake victims and heartwarming moments of extraordinary kindness as people literally donate the clothes off their backs. 

The 7.3 magnitude earthquake that struck on the Iran-Kurdistan Region border has claimed the lives of 432 in Iran and injured 9,397, according to updated official figures released on Thursday. 

The death toll is likely to climb as bodies still remain under the rubble and others have been buried without official death certificates. 

The Kurdish areas that suffered the most damage were already among the poorest and most disadvantaged in the country. The large scale damage included hundreds of low-quality housing built as part of a government project for low-income families. The president has said they will conduct an investigation into the construction project. 

Relief efforts are being led by the Iranian army, including the Revolutionary Guards (IRGC). Iran’s Supreme Leader urged officials to spare no effort in bringing aid, IRNA reported. 

But many within the persecuted Kurdish minority have complained that aid is slow or non-existent and the armed forces are abusing the population. The only aid that has made it to some villages has come from ordinary citizens in neighbouring cities and provinces shunning government aid donation drives in favour of collecting and delivering food, water, and warm clothes themselves.  

Iran has refused international offers of aid, with the foreign minister saying that they have sufficient resources to handle the crisis. 

The Iranian Red Crescent stated that they are able to meet needs for the “current emergency phase” with just national resources and other internal organizations, but given the extent of the damage would welcome international assistance during next phases of “transitional relief, rehabilitation and recovery.”