Iran is young, urbanised and educated: census

Iran has released census figures that correct some misconceptions about the country, reporting fewer than expected Jews and internet users.

Iranian Shiite Muslim worshippers gather for Friday prayers at Tehran University. Although the Islamic republic is 99.4 per cent Muslim, there are other religions represented.
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TEHRAN // Iran released census figures yesterday that corrected some misconceptions about the country, reporting fewer than expected Jews and internet users.

Even though the Islamic republic is 99.4 per cent Muslim, there are other religions represented. There are 8,756 Jews in the country, according to the census. That was fewer than the 20,000 figure previously estimated.

There are also 117,704 Christians, the census said, as well as 25,271 Zoroastrians (adherents of a faith that dominated pre-Islamic Persia), and 49,101 listed as "other". A total 265,899 people did not give a religion.

Iran has the biggest group of internet users in the Middle East - although the figure of 11.2 million declaring themselves connected was far smaller than the estimate of 36 million advanced by the telecommunications ministry.

The census gave Iran's total population as 75.2 million, 99.4 per cent of whom are Muslim. That was larger than any other country in the Middle East except for Egypt (81 million, according to the World Bank).

Iranians accounted for 73.5 million of the total, with 1.5 million Afghans making up the biggest minority living in the country. Other minorities included Iraqis (51,500), Pakistanis (17,700) and Turks (1,600).

An overwhelming proportion of the population - 71 per cent - lived in urban areas, and Tehran and its satellite towns are home to 12.2 million inhabitants.

Education is an important value in Iran, as seen by a big jump in the number of people pursuing higher studies at university or in religious institutions (10.5 million, up from 6.9 million in 2006).

Men and women are split almost equally 50-50 in this category, underlining the growing number of educated Iranian women.

The literacy rate for those aged between 10 and 49 was 93 per cent.

Most of the population is young, with 55 per cent younger than 30.

The proportion of young Iranians use to be even higher, but a rapidly slowing birth rate - an average 1.29 children per couple, compared to 1.62 in the last census in 2006 - has resulted in a decrease in recent years.

The supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, has recently sought to reverse a previous policy favouring birth control in a bid to boost the population to between 150 million and 200 million.