Relief operations are under way in Iran after two strong earthquakes in the north-west left at least 250 people dead and more than 2,000 injured.

The 6.4 and 6.3 quakes struck near Tabriz and Ahar on Saturday afternoon, with more than 55 aftershocks reported over the following hours.

More than 100 villages are damaged - thousands of people spent the night in emergency shelters or in the open.

Relief agencies are providing survivors with tents, bread and drinking water.

The BBC's Mohsen Asgari in the capital Tehran says hundreds of people were rescued overnight but that the aftershocks made the operation exhausting.

'Mass grave'

On Sunday Hassan Ghadami, Iran's deputy interior minister, said that "all those under debris have been rescued and the quake-stricken people are now being provided with their basic needs".

Local officials said all the reported deaths have been in rural areas, an indication of the poorer quality of housing outside cities.

"This village is a mass grave," said Alireza Haidaree, who had been searching for survivors in Baje Baj.

"There are so many other villages that have been completely destroyed," he told AFP.

"The quake has created huge panic among the people," one resident of Tabriz told the BBC. "Everyone has rushed to the streets."

The towns of Haris and Varzaqan in East Azerbaijan province in north-western Iran were among those hit.

Fars reported that about 110 villages had been damaged. At least were four totally flattened and 60 others sustained extensive damage.

Reports say phone lines to many villages were cut off, restricting rescuers to radio contact.

The BBC's Mohsen Asgari says many people were in their homes when the earthquake struck and that is why the death toll is rising

A resident of Tabriz told Reuters that a local hospital he visited to give blood was struggling to cope with the number of injured people, most of whom had been taken there by their families.

Arash, a resident of Ahar, told Reuters the hospital there was full, and that the road between the two towns was jammed with people trying to find medical help.

Stadium shelter

Sixty-six rescue teams have been sent to the region, along with about 200 ambulances and five helicopters.

Dozens of families spent the night outdoors in parks, and television showed footage of bodies lying in a mortuary in Ahar, including those of children.

As morning came, search teams with sniffer dogs began working through the wreckage in Tabriz.

There were reports that in some areas many of the victims were women, who had been inside homes preparing evening meals to break the Ramadan fast.

One farmer from the village of Qanbar Mehdizade said he and his family survived because they had been working in the open fields at the time.

"I felt the earth shake and I was thrown off the vehicle," he told AFP.

The Red Crescent has provided 3,000 tents, blankets, food and blood supplies. It also took over a sports stadium to provide emergency shelter to about 16,000 people who had fled their homes.

A provincial official warned people to stay outdoors overnight because of the risk of aftershocks.

The Turkish Red Crescent said it was sending emergency supplies to the border.

Iranian politician Mohammad Hassan-Nejad said relief groups had still not been able to reach the more remote areas and warned the death toll could rise.

"Currently the roads are closed and the only way to reach these villages is by air," he told the Iranian Students' News Agency (ISNA).

The first quake struck 23km (14 miles) south-west of Ahar and 58km (36) miles north-east of Tabriz at 16:54 local time (12:23 GMT) on Saturday, said the US Geological Survey.

The second earthquake struck just 11 minutes after the first, slightly closer to Tabriz.

Iran straddles a major geological fault line, making it prone to seismic activity. In 2003 an earthquake in the city of Bam left more than 25,000 people dead.

-BBC