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  • In 2015, Amnesty International called for Iran to block a bill that would restrict access

  • to contraceptives and sex education. In recent years, Iran has been trying to bump up their

  • birth rates since a severe drop in population growth during the 90s. The Iranian government

  • has even introduced an official matchmaking website. So, what is Iran’s population control

  • problem?

  • Well, the lack of population growth can be attributed directly to back-and-forth birth

  • policy. Before the 1979 Islamic Revolution, a number of ground breaking women’s rights

  • laws were passed in Iran. They mostly changed the status of women from second-class citizens

  • to autonomous members of society. However, the 1979 shift from a secular progressive

  • state to an Islamic theocratic republic, revoked these new rights. Their religious leader demanded

  • an increase in population in the hopes of building a 20-million-member army. By 1986,

  • Iran had one of the highest growth rates in the world, and in just ten years jumped from

  • a population of about 34 million to 50 million. This averaged about seven children per woman,

  • compared to roughly four and a half children per woman worldwide.

  • But in 1989, Iran’s new religious leadership made a complete 180. They began to worry that

  • the country’s food, education, housing, and employment sectors would not be able to

  • keep up with the growing population. To stem growth, the country instituted a two child-per-family

  • limit, and encouraged widespread contraception, including condoms, pills, IUDs, and surgery.

  • The Iranian government even imposed certain penalties on having too many children, including

  • a loss of food aid and no paid maternity leave. By 2001, birth rates plummeted to just under

  • 3 children per woman.

  • The drop in population growth was so successful that in 2006, Iran’s new president, Mahmoud

  • Ahmadinejad, restarted efforts to raise the population again. This time from 70 million

  • to 120 million. He argued that because the West’s average population growth was dropping,

  • Iran would triumph by increasing their own. However, many of the issues leading to the

  • original birth restrictions still remained, including inflation, mass unemployment, and

  • even a potential lack of water for the surging population.

  • In their attempts to reverse earlier policies, Iran has since ended birth control subsidies

  • and passed a bill that would treat vasectomies and tubectomies like illegal abortions. Iran’s

  • religious leader has also apologized for pushing contraceptive policy well into the 1990s,

  • calling it a mistake. Despite criticism of increasing Iran’s population in the face

  • of economic and resource shortages, there is little chance of Iran reversing itself

  • a fourth time in the near future.

  • In their attempts at population boosting, Iran’s government has set up a matchmaking

  • website to appeal to tech-savvy youths. Check out Seeker Daily’s video up top to learn

  • more about their version of a dating app. And to find out just how powerful Iran really

  • is, watch our video below. Thanks for watching and make sure to like and subscribe for new

  • videos every day.

In 2015, Amnesty International called for Iran to block a bill that would restrict access

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