Iran parliament rejects motion to set up separate housing ministry

Young journalists club

News ID: 52727
Iran » Iran
Publish Date: 7:58 - 16 August 2021
Monday, 15 August 2021 (YJC)_ The Iranian parliament has rejected a motion to set up a separate ministry for housing and urbanization amid plans by the newly-elected president Ebrahim Raeisi to expand affordable housing schemes across the country.

Iran parliament rejects motion to set up separate housing ministryThe motion to separate housing and urbanization sector from Iran’s transportation ministry was rejected in a Sunday session of the parliament with 127 lawmakers voting against and 104 others voting for. Five members of the parliament abstained from voting during the session.

Reports in the local media suggested a new government led by Raeisi which was sworn in earlier this month was against dividing the Ministry of Road and Urban Development into two separate ministries.

However, a representative of the government told lawmakers in the Sunday session that Raeisi’s administration was not entirely opposed to the scheme but preferred to have it implemented in the next calendar year beginning March.

Raeisi has announced sweeping plans for expansion of the housing sector in Iran. He promised during his presidential campaign in June that his government would build one million affordable houses in the country each year.

Raiesi has nominated Rostam Qassemi, a former oil minister with a long experience in the construction sector, for assuming the position of minister of road and urban development.

Qassemi has said his immediate priority in the ministry, if he is approved by the parliament, would be to allocate more loans and grants to renters to help them cope with soaring housing prices in Iran.

Lawmakers opposing the creation of a new ministry for housing said that the plan would need huge financial resources.

Others, however, said the plan would help streamline plans in the transportation and housing sectors in Iran and would help the government have a better control on the housing market in the country.

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