President Hassan Rouhani said Iran's fight against the coronavirus was being "severely hampered" by U.S. sanctions, as state television reported that the death toll from the illness rose on Saturday to 611, up nearly 100 from a day earlier.
State media said Rouhani wrote to a number of world leaders, without naming them.
"In (a) letter to counterparts @HassanRouhani informs how efforts to fight #COVID19 pandemic in Iran have been severely hampered by U.S. sanctions, urging them to cease observing them," Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif said on Twitter.
"It is IMMORAL to let a bully kill innocents," Zarif said.
Iran, the worst-affected country in the Middle East, said on Thursday it had asked the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for five billion U.S. dollars in emergency funding to combat the coronavirus outbreak.
Screenshot of Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif's twitter.
The escalating outbreak has damaged Iranian businesses and is bound to hit its non-oil exports after many neighboring countries and trade partners shut their borders.
A Health Ministry official, cited by state television on Saturday, put the total number of infections in the country at 12,729.
Tehran governor general Anoushirvan Mohseni-Bandpey denied that officials were planning a lockdown in the capital, state television reported, after people posted messages on social media saying that residents would not be allowed to leave their homes from Sunday.
"Tehran's governor-general rejected any rumor about a lockdown in Tehran as a 'big lie'," state television said in a news flash.
Working hours in government offices would not be changed in the next few days and large supermarkets would extend their business hours, Mohseni-Bandpey was quoted by the television as saying.
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani (C) speaks while visiting a new highway that connects Tehran to the north of the country, in Iran, February 25, 2020. /AP
Health Minister Saeed Namaki earlier said that officials had approved plans to set up screening stations outside a number of cities.
Officials have expressed concern about the possibility of infections spreading during Nowruz, the Iranian new year starting on March 20, which is usually a period when families travel to vacation spots around the country.
On Friday, state media said security forces would empty the streets of cities across Iran within a day in a drive to fight the spread of the virus, after officials repeatedly complained that many Iranians have ignored calls to stay home and avoid travel.
Iran's economy was already battered by U.S. sanctions that curb oil and gas exports crucial for government revenues. A slowdown in economic activity caused by the virus outbreak and a sustained closure of its borders are expected to lead to a contraction this year, analysts have said.
Firefighters disinfect a street against the new coronavirus, in western Tehran, Iran, March 13, 2020. /AP
U.S. President Donald Trump reimposed sanctions on vital Iranian sectors including oil after he withdrew the United States from the 2015 Iran nuclear deal signed with six world powers.
Trump has said he hopes the sanctions will limit Tehran's ballistic missile program and influence across the Middle East. Tehran says its nuclear program is peaceful and its missiles are for deterrence and defensive purposes.