Iran's deputy housing minister called for international support on Monday to rebuild homes damaged in the war during the World Urban Forum [1].

The request highlights the scale of domestic displacement and the financial burden of reconstruction following conflict. By seeking aid at a global summit, Iran aims to integrate its recovery efforts into the broader international framework for urban development.

The appeal took place in Baku, Azerbaijan, where the World Urban Forum serves as a platform for discussing sustainable city growth and housing rights [2]. The minister said that approximately 150,000 homes were damaged in the war and require rebuilding [1]. This domestic crisis mirrors a wider global trend of instability affecting urban infrastructure.

The forum in Baku is expected to host 28,000 participants [3]. These delegates include urban planners, policymakers, and representatives from various international organizations tasked with solving the global housing shortage.

This regional struggle exists within a larger systemic failure of global housing. UN-Habitat has warned that 3 billion people worldwide currently lack adequate housing [4]. The agency notes that global conflicts continue to exacerbate this crisis by destroying existing infrastructure and displacing populations.

Iran's call for assistance focuses on the necessity of specialized urban reconstruction support to restore residential stability. The deputy housing minister said the goal is to address the housing crisis caused by war and ensure that affected populations can return to safe, permanent dwellings [1].

Iran's deputy housing minister called for international support to rebuild homes damaged in the war.

Iran's appeal at the World Urban Forum signals a shift toward utilizing multilateral diplomatic channels to address internal infrastructure failures. By framing its reconstruction needs alongside the UN-Habitat's global housing crisis, Iran is attempting to legitimize its request for aid as a humanitarian necessity rather than a purely political or bilateral issue.