Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Report: Mahan Air ignored virus flight bans, suppressed reports of crew illness

The Iranian airline is under U.S. sanctions due to its links with Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

A Mahan Air Airbus A300B4-600 lands at Birmingham International Airport, England. Photo by Adrian Pingstone via Wikimedia Commons.
A Mahan Air Airbus A300B4-600 lands at Birmingham International Airport, England. Photo by Adrian Pingstone via Wikimedia Commons.

Iran’s Mahan Air continued to operate flights to and from Iran, Iraq, the United Arab Emirates and Syria from late January until late March, despite flight bans due to the coronavirus pandemic, according to a BBC investigation published on Tuesday.

Sources inside the Iranian airline told the BBC that when staff reported that dozens of crew members were showing COVID-19 symptoms, they were silenced.

The airline is under U.S. sanctions due to its links with Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

Meanwhile, Iran’s COVID-19 death toll rose by 78 in the past 24 hours to a current total of 6,418, Iranian Health Ministry spokesman Kianush Jahanpur said in a statement broadcast on Iranian state TV on Wednesday, according to Reuters.

The official number of confirmed cases in Iran is 101,650, even though many observers, including the head of Israel’s Mossad intelligence agency, say that the true figure is much higher—not only in, Iran but in Iraq, Syria and Lebanon.

The judges said the sanctions, which the United States imposed in response to the Hague-based court’s targeting of Israel, are unlawful.
The Fedayeen Football League plans to hold the game in the heart of the city’s World Cup activities, wearing keffiyehs and waving Palestinian, Iranian and Lebanese flags, to call for FIFA to expel Israel.
Katie Lawson, a university spokeswoman, told JNS that it was the “first time in more than six years that this authority was exercised.”
The anti-Israel “Squad” member is backing Imraan Siddiqi’s bid to unseat a Democratic incumbent, as progressive challengers target fellow Democrats in Washington state legislative races.
Only 34% of respondents approved of the way the U.S. president was handling Iran, with 62% disapproving.
The study achieved 82.8% accuracy using AI analysis of eye blood vessels, offering a potential alternative to blood tests.
Benny Gantz, JNS editor-in-chief Jonathan S. Tobin, Gilad Erdan, Mosab Hassan Yousef, Nissim Black and leading voices in security, diplomacy, media, law and Jewish communal affairs headline the summit’s third day in Jerusalem.