Iran charges 20 over deadly building collapse

Iranians gather at the site where a ten-storey building collapsed in the southwestern city of Abadan on May 23, 2022. (Tasnim News/AFP)
Updated 21 July 2022
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Iran charges 20 over deadly building collapse

  • It took emergency services almost two weeks to recover the bodies of those killed in the disaster
  • Tragedy sparked a series of demonstrations across the country against authorities accused of corruption and incompetence

TEHRAN: Iran has issued indictments against 20 people after the deadly collapse of a building that triggered widespread anti-corruption protests, the judiciary said on Thursday.
The 10-storey Metropol building that was under construction in the city of Abadan in southwestern Khuzestan province collapsed on May 23, leading to death of 43 people.
It took emergency services almost two weeks to recover the bodies of those killed in the disaster, one of Iran’s deadliest in years.
The tragedy sparked a series of demonstrations across the country against authorities accused of corruption and incompetence.
At the time, the provincial judiciary said it had arrested 13 people, including Abadan’s mayor and two former mayors in connection with the case.
“Considering the importance of the matter ... the case has been carefully evaluated and indictments have been issued against 20 people,” said the judiciary’s Mizan Online website.
“All the defendants in this case are currently in custody with applicable warrants,” it said, without identifying them or specifying what charges they faced.
The judiciary also confirmed the death of the building’s owner, who many had wanted to be held responsible for the collapse.
Iranian media outlets had earlier reported that he was among those who died in the disaster.


Trump offers to mediate Egypt-Ethiopia dispute on Nile River waters

US President Donald Trump and Egypt's President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt, October 13, 2025. (REUTERS)
Updated 5 sec ago
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Trump offers to mediate Egypt-Ethiopia dispute on Nile River waters

  • Egypt says ​the dam violates international treaties and could cause both droughts ⁠and flooding, a claim Ethiopia rejects

WASHINGTON: US President Donald Trump offered on Friday to mediate a dispute over Nile River ​waters between Egypt and Ethiopia. “I am ready to restart US mediation between Egypt and Ethiopia to responsibly resolve the question of ‘The Nile Water Sharing’ once and for all,” he ‌wrote to ‌Egyptian President ‌Abdel ⁠Fattah El-Sisi ​in ‌a letter that also was posted on Trump’s Truth Social account.
Addis Ababa’s September 9 inauguration of its Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam has been a source of anger ⁠in Cairo, which is downstream on the ‌Nile.
Ethiopia, the continent’s second-most ‍populous nation ‍with more than 120 million people, ‍sees the $5 billion dam on a tributary of the Nile as central to its economic ambitions.
Egypt says ​the dam violates international treaties and could cause both droughts ⁠and flooding, a claim Ethiopia rejects.
Trump has praised El-Sisi in the past, including during an October trip to Egypt to sign a deal related to the Gaza conflict. In public comments, Trump has echoed Cairo’s concerns about the water issue.