News

Glide over Tehran, Iran’s sprawling capital, where the urban landscape meets the Alborz Mountains. This drone footage ...
Lack of rain and soaring temperatures have stressed Tehran’s infrastructure to the breaking point. Authorities shuttered government offices in the capital and in about half of Iran’s provinces today ...
Vital reservoirs are shrinking, authorities are scrambling to reduce demand and stave off catastrophe and residents are ...
Tehran has closed the city's public toilets, under governmental measures introduced due to an acute water crisis nationwide ...
According to media reports, there were also airstrikes in the east of the city. The Israeli army called on the residents of a 30-square-kilometre district in the city to "urgently" leave the area.
Some residents of Tehran said they were driving out of the city to spend a few days in smaller towns and villages, fearing that the capital could be struck again by Israel. A 42-year-old woman who ...
What People Are Saying Tehran's residents have painted a picture of hysteria and chaos in the capital city amid intensifying strikes. "This is a massacre. The blasts haven't stopped.
Tehran Endures Night of Heavy Attacks Before Cease-Fire Is Announced Large flames illuminated the night sky as airstrikes pummeled the Iranian capital, residents said.
One Tehran is filled with apartments and parks, evening picnics and bus rides, laughter and prayer and disappointment—the “city of man,” in Augustine’s sense, full of contradictions and grace.
With around 10 million people within its nearly 300 square miles, according to the C.I.A. World Factbook, Tehran is comparable in density to New York City.