Iran museums reopen after year-long break
Gulf Times
A man visits the National Museum of Iran, which houses exhibits from the early Paleolithic to the Qajar period, in the capital Tehran, yesterday.
Iran reopened museums in Tehran and other cities yesterday after a more than year-long closure because of the Covid-19 pandemic. “Museums in Tehran and other large cities that are no longer red-coded, meaning the risk of contracting the virus was very high, reopened on Sunday,” the director of Iran’s museums, said Mohamed-Reza Kargar. “Tourists and visitors are welcome to return while observing (sanitary) measures.” A country with a millennia-long history, Iran has an abundance of 746 museums, including 170 in the capital. “We are absolutely delighted, and we think the people are too because they were fed up with staying home, and visiting museums improves their mood,” Kargar said in his tourism and heritage ministry office. “We have safety protocols in place of course, and the number of visitors will be dependent on the space at our sites so the public stays safe and healthy.” Kargar said only students, researchers and staff were allowed into museums during the past 14 months. Iran’s museums attracted more than 21mn visitors in the year before the outbreak of Covid-19 that forced museums to close in May 2020. Yesterday, the National Museum of Iran with its magnificent collection of treasures dating back to the Bronze and Iron ages was still deserted. “We have to wait for the news to spread and schools to reopen for people to come back,” explained Firouzeh Sepidnameh, head of the museum’s pre-Islamic collections. Iran, the worst-hit country in the Middle East, has confirmed more than 5.4mn cases of coronavirus, including 117,000 deaths, according to figures issued yesterday by the health ministry. Out of a population of 83mn, 29mn Iranians have received a first dose of vaccination and almost 14mn have been fully vaccinated against the virus. Artefacts are on display at the National Museum of Iran, in the capital Tehran, yesterday.