On Saturday, May 10, Mahsa Asghari, a young schoolgirl who had suffered severe burns in a school van fire in Urmia, succumbed to her injuries.
The tragic incident occurred on April 29, when a school van carrying nine female students caught fire following a traffic accident. All nine students sustained various degrees of injuries and burns.
Mahsa was initially taken to the hospital in Urmia and later transferred to a specialized burn center in Tehran. Despite extensive medical efforts, she passed away due to the severity of her injuries.
The remaining eight students are recovering at home after receiving initial medical treatment.
This devastating event has once again highlighted the dangerous deterioration of the public transportation fleet in Iran, particularly school transport vehicles.
Such incidents, especially those involving children, are deeply rooted in the country’s infrastructural failures. Aging vehicles, lack of safety standards, and poor road conditions are among the persistent factors endangering lives across the country.
According to official statistics, more than 20,000 people lose their lives in road accidents each year in Iran, and between 200,000 and 300,000 are injured, disabled, or left bedridden. (Arman-e Emrouz, March 9, 2025)
While Iran urgently needs to modernize its transportation infrastructure and invest in public safety, the regime continues to divert vital national resources—including oil revenues—toward missile development, regional military interventions, and domestic repression rather than prioritizing the well-being of its citizens.