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To: Hostage

Iran is economically self sufficient. The only thing they don’t make at home are computers and cars.


12 posted on 02/06/2014 10:00:16 AM PST by Eleutheria5 (End the occupation. Annex today.)
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To: Eleutheria5

Unless they’ve developed the capability recently, they don’t make gasoline, either.


15 posted on 02/06/2014 10:22:16 AM PST by DuncanWaring (The Lord uses the good ones; the bad ones use the Lord.)
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To: Eleutheria5

40 years ago Iranians were self-sufficient. But things have changed greatly.

There are 35 million new people of adult age without education and skills.

The Mullahs dictate that women should be married before having sex and that marriages should produce children immediately without delay and without waiting after giving birth before a new pregnancy is conceived. Women are to bear children as soon as they are capable.

The results are a demographic disaster.

Long ago Iran had a middle class where young men were expected to be able to support a family before marrying and having a family. Now young unmarried men and women can be arrested just for holding hands or necking on a park bench.

The infrastructure is old and decaying in Iran, and has not kept up with the baby boom that came about by dictates from the Mullahs.

Iran which 40 years ago was between first and second world economically is now a 3rd world cesspool. Iran does not have enough housing, clean water and food to sustain its new unskilled and uneducated population of young people. Large portions of cities especially the outskirts resemble toxic poverty of Calcutta with tents, ramshackled arrangements, no plumbing and requiring to dig holes for human sewage or to carry it in pots to nearby streams.

“The World Bank’s Board of Directors this week approved a total of $359 million in loans for two projects aimed at helping the Government of Iran improve housing conditions for poor and middle-income urban neighborhoods as well as expand access to clean water and coverage of sanitation services in the two large cities of Ahwaz and Shiraz.”

“The Water Supply and Sanitation Project ($279 million) supports the initial phase of the Government of Iran’s long-term development plans to expand water and wastewater facilities in Ahwaz and Shiraz by 2027. About 96 percent of the Iran’s urban population is connected to public water supplies. However, only about 16 percent is connected to sanitary public sewerage, and only part of the collected sewage is treated before disposal. The bulk of sewage is discharged untreated, polluting groundwater and posing a risk to public health.”

“The five-year project will benefit some 2.4 million people living in Ahwaz and Shiraz, a proportion of whom are poor. It will significantly increase coverage of sanitation services as well as improve the quality of water supply in the two cities, with substantial hygiene and health benefits to their population. The Project will upgrade existing water treatment plants, provide additional treatment, and improve water networks in both cities. Wastewater treatment works will include the rehabilitation, improvement and expansion of wastewater facilities and wastewater collection systems.”

“The project will also strengthen the capacity of sector institutions, particularly the Ahwaz and Shiraz Water and Wastewater companies and assist them in improving their efficiency and financial autonomy.”

“The Urban Upgrading and Housing Reform Project ($80 million) is the first phase of a twelve year lending program ($264 million) which aims at supporting the Government of Iran’s housing sector goals as spelled out in its Third and Fourth Five-Year Development Plans.”

“During the last decade, Iran has experienced rapid urban growth resulting in the proliferation of informal settlements. Both central and local governments were unable to provide basic services to these areas that represent around 20-30% of the urban population and that are home to the poorest segments of the society.”

“Furthermore, Iran’s housing sector is hindered by an inefficient system of housing subsidies, an inactive land market controlled largely by the government, poor urban planning and constrained role of local governments. Also, being among the most earthquake-prone countries in the world, Iran is at risk of facing large and unexpected housing loss.”

“To help the Government of Iran achieve its housing sector goals, the Project will launch a nationwide urban upgrading program in major under-serviced settlements in up to five provincial capital cities. The Project will also initiate housing sector reforms through technical assistance in areas such as: land management, housing finance, housing subsidies and information aiming at improving the affordability of housing in Iran.”

“The two projects fall in line with the World Bank’s interim strategy for Iran which focuses on extending assistance to priority areas including low-income housing, water and sanitation and urban upgrading and community-based infrastructure, among others. The Bank is currently implementing four projects in Iran in healthcare and nutrition, sewerage in Tehran, environmental management, and emergency earthquake recovery.”


16 posted on 02/06/2014 10:23:44 AM PST by Hostage (ARTICLE V)
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