Iran’s Water Crisis Deepens: Mismanagement and Corruption Disproportionately Harm Women’s Lives

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Iran is grappling with a severe and deepening water crisis, which disproportionately impacts the nation’s women, affecting their health, livelihoods, and security. While the problem was initially perceived as a consequence of climate factors like drought and declining rainfall, a significant number of international observers and researchers now agree that the true root causes are systemic. An overwhelming 70 to 80 percent of the current crisis stems from entrenched corruption, chronic mismanagement, and a lack of transparency within the ruling establishment, a powerful symptom of broader structural and managerial failure across the country.

This is characterized less as a “crisis of resources” and more as a “crisis of decisions” that has made the land thirstier and the future more precarious. Unsustainable policies and a lack of effective governance have eroded public trust, a dangerous trend for the stability of the nation. The deliberate failure to address these systemic issues, including the siphoning of resources and poor infrastructure management, has directly compromised the welfare of citizens, particularly those in rural and marginalized communities.

The gendered dimensions of this crisis are becoming tragically clear. As water scarcity forces families to alter their livelihoods and women assume increased burdens of water collection, their health and personal security are placed at greater risk. Until these fundamental issues of corruption and mismanagement at the heart of the government are directly and immediately addressed and removed, Iran’s present—and its future—will only become more precarious, with the suffering of vulnerable populations continuing to mount.

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