About Iran
General Information
The Land
Iran (officially The Islamic Republic of Iran) is a vast country in southwest
Asia. Covering a surface area of 1,648,195 square kilo meters, it is bordered by
Iraq (1,609 km) on the west, Turkey (486 km) on the northwest, the Republics of
Armenia, Azarbaijan, Turkmanistan (all parts of the former Soviet Union), as
well as the Caspian Sea (2,670 km) on the north, Afghanistan (945 km) on the
east, Pakistan (978 km) on the southeast, the Persian Gulf (1,259 km) and the
Sea of Oman (748 km) on the south. The Persian Gulf is the shallow marginal part
of the Indian Ocean that lies between the Arabian Peninsula and the southwest
Iran. The sea has an area of 240,000 square kilometers from the Arvand Rud
(Shatt ol-Arab) delta to the Strait of Hormoz, which links it with the Sea of
Oman. Its linear length is 900 km, and its width varies from a maximum of 338 km
to minimum of 55 km in the Strait of Hormoz. It is bordered on the north,
northeast and east by Iran, on the northwest by Iraq and Kuwait, on the west and
southwest by Saudi Arabia and Qatar, and on the south and the southeast by the
United Arab Emirates and partly by Oman.
The Sea of Oman opens into the Arabian Sea. It was generally thought that the
gulf extended farther north and that sediment dropped by the Tigris, Euphrates,
Karun, and Karkheh rivers filled the northern part of the gulf to create a great
delta. But geologic investigation now indicates that the coastline has not moved
and that the marshlands of the delta represent a sinking of the earth's crust as
the Arabian land block pushes under Iran.
The Islands
Regardless of Bahrain as the largest island which belonged to Iran until the
early second half of the 20th century, Iran has the largest number of islands in
the Persian Gulf, the most important of which are as follows: Minoo, Kharg
(Iranian oil terminal, 6 km long, 3 km wide, site of one of the world's largest
deep-water oil ports, and linked to the mainland by a 40-km pipeline), Sheikh
Sa'ad, Sheikh Sho'ayb, Hendurabi, Kish (largest island of Iran in the Strait of
Hormoz, 1,300 sq. km), Farur, Siri, Abu Mussa, the Greater and Lesser Tumbs,
Qeshm, Hengam, Larak, Farsi, Hormoz, and Lavan. The most significant Iranian
ports on the Persian Gulf are Abadan, Khorramshahr, Bandar-e Imam Khomeini
(former Shahpur), Mahshahr, Deilam, Genaveh, Rig, Bushehr, Bandar-e Lengeh, and
Bandar-e Abbas.
The Rivers
Several rivers are flowing inside Iranian mainland, the only navigable one of
which is the Karun (920-km). Other large rivers are: The Atrak (535 km), Dez
(515 km), Hendijan (488 km), Jovein (440 km) Jarahi (438 km), Karkheh (755 km),
Mand (685 km), Qara Chai (540 km), Sefid Rud (795 km), and the Zayandeh Rud (405
km). During the summertime, there is little water flowing in the mainland
rivers. However, water flows underground, finding its outlets in subterranean
water canals (locally called qanats), springs, and tapped by wells.
The Mountains
The high Alborz range in the north, the Zagros range in the west and southwest
as well as the eastern mountains of Iran, which surround the Iranian Plateau,
provide Iran with a ruggedly mountainous terrain.
Population
More than 60,000,000 with a population density of 32.26 per sq. km. The nation
consists of the following national and ethnic groups: Turks, Kurds, Baluchis,
Lurs, Turkmans, Arabs, the Armenians, the Assyrians, and the nomads (consisting
of the Bakhtiari, Qashqa'i and several other smaller tribes). According to 1992
census, some 33, 137,567 or 57.3% of the total population were living in cities
and towns, while 24,972,660 or 42.97% were either living in rural areas or
migrating.
Government
Iran is an Islamic Republic established following the Islamic Revolution of
1979. Under the Constitution of Nov 1979 all cultural, social, political, and
economic institutions of Iranian society are to be based on the Islamic
principles and norms. All government policies are supervised and correlated with
Divine decrees through the Vali-e Faqih (Jurisconsult or the Supreme Leader).
According to the Constitution he is responsible for this concordance before God
and the people during the time when the 12th Imam is in occultation. The
legislative wing of the State, Majlis-e Shura-ye Eslami (Islamic Consultative
Assembly) consists of 270 representatives elected by the direct vote of the
people for a term of four years. The Constitution has also provided for a
constitutional council of sages known as the Council of the Guardians of the
Constitution (Shura-ye Negahban-e Qanun-e Assasi) which has the power to either
approve or vote out the Assembly's resolutions. The Assembly of Experts
(Majlis-e Khebregan), is another Islamic body responsible for the choosing of a
Leader in the event of the present leader's demise, or to replace him with
another one if required. The country is divided into 25 Ostans (provinces) ruled
over by an Ostandar (governor-general).
Reference : Salam Iran Website