Aid groups use land routes to deliver aid to Iran

Lebanese first responders search for survivors in the aftermath of an Israeli airstrike that targeted the southern Lebanese village of Maaroub on April 13, 2016. (AFP)
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Updated 14 April 2026
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Aid groups use land routes to deliver aid to Iran

  • The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said it had delivered some 200 trauma kits as well as tents and blankets on trucks sent along a new route from Turkiye

GENEVA: International humanitarian groups said on Tuesday ​they had sent emergency relief through overland routes to Iran, some of their first deliveries of aid since US-Israeli strikes began. 
Aid workers say needs are high in the wake of six weeks of strikes, but stocks of emergency humanitarian supplies became stuck in Dubai warehouses as shipping and air routes were blocked by the expanding conflict.
Iranian authorities say more than 3,000 people have been killed ‌in Iran during ‌the war and the UN refugee ​agency ‌says up to 3.2 ​million have been displaced.
The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies said it had delivered some 200 trauma kits as well as tents and blankets on trucks sent along a new route from Turkiye.
The trucks crossed the Iranian border on Sunday and are set to arrive in the capital Tehran on Tuesday, said IFRC spokesperson Tommaso Della Longa.
“For us it’s very important as it represents a new ‌route for getting aid into Iran and ‌we’re very optimistic to scale up,” ​he told a Geneva press briefing.
“Before ‌it was very easy to take a flight or a boat ‌and bring aid directly to Iran in a couple of hours.”
Separately, the International Committee of the Red Cross said it had made its first shipment to Iran since the conflict began, with five trucks arriving from Jordan on ‌Monday. Another nine are expected later this week. It also handed supplies to the Iranian Red Crescent with 100,000 responders, four of whom have been killed in the war.