More Unrest in Iran as Building Collapse Death Toll Increases

Iranian Senior Vice-President Mohammad Mokhber (second right) visits the 10-story Metropol Building which collapsed on Monday, in the city of Abadan, Iran, May 27, 2022. (Iranian Senior Vice-President Office via AP)
Iranian Senior Vice-President Mohammad Mokhber (second right) visits the 10-story Metropol Building which collapsed on Monday, in the city of Abadan, Iran, May 27, 2022. (Iranian Senior Vice-President Office via AP)
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More Unrest in Iran as Building Collapse Death Toll Increases

Iranian Senior Vice-President Mohammad Mokhber (second right) visits the 10-story Metropol Building which collapsed on Monday, in the city of Abadan, Iran, May 27, 2022. (Iranian Senior Vice-President Office via AP)
Iranian Senior Vice-President Mohammad Mokhber (second right) visits the 10-story Metropol Building which collapsed on Monday, in the city of Abadan, Iran, May 27, 2022. (Iranian Senior Vice-President Office via AP)

Iranian riot police clashed with angry protesters in the southwestern city of Abadan, according to online videos, and state-run media reported that the death toll from a building collapse there reached 31 on Monday.

According to The Associated Press, the official IRNA news agency said two more bodies were pulled from the rubble of an under-construction tower that collapsed a week ago. Rescue workers were continuing to clear the debris Monday and search for more victims under the toppled part of the Metropol Building. Out of 37 injured people, two remain hospitalized.

The deadly collapse has raised questions about the safety of similar buildings in the country and underscored an ongoing crisis in Iranian construction projects. The collapse reminded many of the 2017 fire and collapse of the iconic Plasco building in Tehran that killed 26 people.

It also drew angry protesters to the streets of Abadan over the past week, leading to eruptions of unrest and clashes with riot police on several occasions.

The semiofficial Fars news agency said mourners gathered at the site of the collapse on Sunday night when a group of protesters attacked the state television's camera crew, forcing police to disperse people to restore order and security.

Tasnim, another semiofficial news agency, reported that more bodies are believed to be under the 10-story building.

Foreign-based Farsi-language television channels carried footage from Abadan that showed young people clashing with police in the city and throwing rocks at them. As over the past few days, it wasn’t immediately clear if anyone was injured or if police made any arrests.



Philippine Troops Kill 7 Communist Rebels in Latest Flare-up of Decades-long Insurgency

This photo provided by Philippine Army 2nd Infantry Battalion shows assault rifles and grenade launchers recovered by troops after a brief gun battle with communist guerrillas in Masbate province, Philippines Sunday, July 27, 2025.(Philippine Army 2nd Infantry Battalion via AP)
This photo provided by Philippine Army 2nd Infantry Battalion shows assault rifles and grenade launchers recovered by troops after a brief gun battle with communist guerrillas in Masbate province, Philippines Sunday, July 27, 2025.(Philippine Army 2nd Infantry Battalion via AP)
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Philippine Troops Kill 7 Communist Rebels in Latest Flare-up of Decades-long Insurgency

This photo provided by Philippine Army 2nd Infantry Battalion shows assault rifles and grenade launchers recovered by troops after a brief gun battle with communist guerrillas in Masbate province, Philippines Sunday, July 27, 2025.(Philippine Army 2nd Infantry Battalion via AP)
This photo provided by Philippine Army 2nd Infantry Battalion shows assault rifles and grenade launchers recovered by troops after a brief gun battle with communist guerrillas in Masbate province, Philippines Sunday, July 27, 2025.(Philippine Army 2nd Infantry Battalion via AP)

Philippine troops killed seven communist guerrillas in an offensive Sunday in a central province and were pursuing several others in the latest flare-up of the decades-long insurgency that the military says is on the brink of collapse.

Army forces killed two New People’s Army guerrillas in a clash last week in Masbate province and then caught up with the fleeing insurgents early Sunday in the hinterlands of Uson town, where they killed seven of them in a 30-minute gunbattle, Maj. Frank Roldan of the army’s 9th Infantry Division said.

Seven assault rifles and two grenade launchers were recovered by troops at the scene of the battle. At least eight rebels managed to flee in different directions and were being pursued, Roldan said.

“We’re in the final push,” Roldan told The Associated Press by telephone, saying a few dozen armed guerrillas remain in the island province, a poverty-stricken agricultural region of more than 900,000 people.

“This successful operation delivers a major blow to the already weakening insurgency,” Roldan said, and asked the remaining rebels to surrender and support the government's peace efforts.

Armed Forces of the Philippines chief Gen. Romeo Brawner Jr. said last week that less than 900 rebels remain, mostly in eastern rural regions, from the estimated 25,000 insurgent force at the peak of the 56-year insurgency, one of Asia’s longest-running rebellions.

Saddled by battle defeats, surrenders and factionalism, the guerrilla forces “are on the brink of collapse,” said Brig. Gen. Medel Aguilar, deputy commander of the military’s Civil Relations Service.

Peace talks brokered by Norway collapsed under previous President Rodrigo Duterte after both sides accused the other of continuing deadly attacks despite the negotiations.