Radio Zamaneh
  • Home
  • Advertise
  • About Zamaneh Media
    • Sponsors
    • Donate
    • Vacancies
    • Contact us
    • Legal
    • Republishing Guidelines
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Advertise
  • About Zamaneh Media
    • Sponsors
    • Donate
    • Vacancies
    • Contact us
    • Legal
    • Republishing Guidelines
No Result
View All Result
Radio Zamaneh
No Result
View All Result

Work-Related Fatalities Increases in Iran

by Zamaneh Media
August 1, 2019
in Featured Items, Latest Articles
Reading Time: 2 mins read
0
Work-Related Fatalities Increases in Iran

Iranian Legal Medicine Organization (ILMO) announced that work-related fatalities have increased to 17.9 percent in the spring of 2019 compared to the same period in the previous year. The most work-related fatalities have been reported in the provinces of Tehran, Isfahan, Razavi Khorasan and Mazandaran, according to ILMO. Tehran and suburbs have the most number of work-related fatalities.


Falling from height is announced to be the number one cause of work-related fatalities in Iran, while the second cause is being hit by a hard object. Electric shock, burning, drowning, deflagration, poisoning, and asphyxiation are among other common causes of work-related accidents leading to death.

Data published by the Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs of Iran and the ILMO show that an average of 1500 Iranian workers die every year due to work-related accidents.

In the last decade in Iran, about 16000 workers have lost their lives as a result of work-related accidents. These data only include the registered and regulated workplaces that have more than 10 workers. Under Iranian law, workplaces with less than 10 employees are exempt from some of the requirements of the labour law including providing workers with insurance.

The Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs statistics show there are at least six million unregistered workers in Iran and thousands of them are Afghan and foreign workers.

The International Labour Organization (ILO) has asked Iran to provide an explanation for the high rate of work-related accidents and the increasing number of fatalities of workers.

Labour activist, Alireza (Behruz) Navaei said, in addition to the official numbers of work-related fatalities, there are other deaths due to a lack of safety and health issues at workplaces. “The number of health and safety-related deaths in workplaces is sixfold,” Navai told Zamaneh.

Lack of training, lack of safety equipment, long shifts, companies’ failure to comply with safety guidelines and lack of regular safety inspections are the main reasons contributing to high rates of work-related fatalities.

According to the Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs, most of the work-related deaths happen in the construction sector. Around 60% of all work-related fatalities occur within the construction industry. The mining industry in Iran has second place in work-related fatalities.

In the year of 2014, according to data published by ILMO, the number of work-related accidents resulting in death in Iran was eight times more than the average rate.

The ILO estimates that some 2.3 million women and men around the world die as a result of work-related accidents or diseases every year.


Read More:

Living in Cars; a new Phenomenon in Tehran

Tags: Afghan workersAfghan workers in IranAlireza (Behruz) NavaeiAlireza NavaeiasphyxiationdeflagrationElectric shockFalling from heighthit by a hard objectILMOIRanIranian Legal Medicine OrganizationIsfahanKhorasan RazaviLabour activistMazandaranpoisoningRazavi KhorasanTehranthe Ministry of Labour and Social Affairswork-related fatalities

Related Posts

Iran’s National Team or the Islamic Republic’s Team?
Latest Articles

Iran’s National Team or the Islamic Republic’s Team?

June 25, 2026
A Diary from Iran: Fear, Waiting, and Uncertainty on the 23rd Day of War
Economy

A Diary from Iran: Fear, Waiting, and Uncertainty on the 23rd Day of War

June 18, 2026
About $3 for a Day’s Labor in Iran: Less Than 250 Grams of Meat
Human Rights

About $3 for a Day’s Labor in Iran: Less Than 250 Grams of Meat

June 18, 2026
A Field Report from Iran: The Housing Crisis After the War
Economy

A Field Report from Iran: The Housing Crisis After the War

June 18, 2026
Hormuz, Bab al-Mandab, and the New Age of Cheap Maritime War
Economy

Hormuz, Bab al-Mandab, and the New Age of Cheap Maritime War

June 11, 2026
Bab al-Mandab: How a Red Sea Chokepoint Can Shake Oil and Food Markets
Economy

Bab al-Mandab: How a Red Sea Chokepoint Can Shake Oil and Food Markets

June 11, 2026
Radio Zamaneh

© 2026 Zamaneh Media

More information

  • Sponsors
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Other ways to give
  • Legal

Follow Us

When The Internet Goes Dark, We Go On Air... Donate in:
USD EUR / All Currencies

When The Internet Goes Dark, We Go On Air...Donate in:
USD EUR / All
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Advertise
  • About Zamaneh Media
    • Sponsors
    • Donate
    • Vacancies
    • Contact us
    • Legal
    • Republishing Guidelines

© 2026 Zamaneh Media