Iran's 'largest internet shutdown ever' is happening now. Here's what you need to know
Iran has gone almost entirely offline as authorities try to stem the spread of nationwide protests that have gripped the country since Friday.
Peyk.az Protesters took to the streets
shortly after the government announced an increase in fuel prices by as
much as 300%. Social media images showed banks, petrol stations and
government buildings set ablaze by rioters. Some protesters chanted
"down with Khamenei," according to videos, referring to the country's
Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei.
The internet blackout started
on Saturday evening and continued through Monday, according to internet
watchdogs. Oracle's Internet Intelligence called it the "largest
internet shutdown ever observed in Iran."
In other countries where nationwide
protests have rattled the political elite -- such as Iraq and Lebanon --
social media has played a key role in mobilizing protesters. It is
unclear if Iranian authorities will succeed in quelling the
demonstrations by depriving them of this crucial protest tool.
Protests in Iran have been a long time
coming. Popular discontent over the country's leadership has brewed for
years as economic conditions continued to worsen, causing nationwide
protests to erupt between December 2017 and January 2018.
Since May 2017, US President Donald
Trump has unleashed several rounds of sanctions that have crippled
Iran's economy, causing its currency to tank, prices to spiral, and
trigger shortages in food and medical equipment. As people's living
conditions worsened, many Iranians blamed US sanctions for their woes,
but also criticized corruption that they believe is widespread among
Iran's clerical leadership.
Last Friday, news a government announcement
about fuel price hikes -- between 50% and 300% -- appeared to be the
straw that broke the camel's back. Large numbers of protesters took to
the streets in urban centers across the country.
Iranian authorities say the price
increase is expected to raise around $2.55 billion a year for extra
subsidies for 18 million families, or about 60 million citizens, on
lower incomes, according to Reuters.
Several protesters have been killed in
the demonstrations, according to government officials. Khamenei, who has
backed the fuel price hikes, has blamed the riots on external forces.
"The counter-revolution and Iran's
enemies have always supported sabotage and breaches of security and
continue to do so," Khamenei said in a live speech on state TV on
Sunday. "Unfortunately, some problems were caused, a number of people
lost their lives and some centers were destroyed."
Khamenei is the final arbiter on
decision-making in Iran. Despite the protests, he said the fuel price
increase "must be implemented" while urging officials not to raise the
price of other commodities.
Interior Minister Abdolreza Rahmani Fazli has warned that security forces will act against protesters if "vandalism" continues.
The White House has publicly supported
the protests. A statement on Sunday from the Trump administration
condemned Tehran's use of "lethal force and severe communications
restrictions" and chastised the government that "abandons its people and
embarks on a crusade for personal power and riches."
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo also tweeted his "support" for the protests on Saturday.
Washington's reaction echoes Trump's
response to the protests two years ago when he called for "change" and
denounced Tehran for "failing at every level."
Tehran has, in turn, dismissed the US
comments as "hypocritical," highlighting US sanctions as a key driver of
the country's economic role.
"It seems weird to see sympathizing with
a nation suffering from the US' economic terrorism and the same person
who has already said that the Iranian people should be starved to
surrender," said Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Abbas Mousavi,
according to state-owned ISNA news agency.
When Trump pulled out of the landmark
2015 nuclear deal with Tehran in May 2017, he unveiled his "maximum
pressure" campaign which sought to extract major political concessions
from Iran through an extreme economic squeeze.
Pompeo initially rolled out a list of 12
demands to restrain what the US calls Tehran's "malign activities" in
the region. But since then, Trump appeared to backtrack, recently saying
that he aimed only to stop Iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon.
Iran suspended its uranium enrichment
activities after signing a landmark agreement with the Obama
administration in 2015. But since May 2018 -- a year after Trump
reimposed sanctions on the country -- Iran has taken several steps away
from its compliance with the nuclear accord.
Iran's protests took off weeks after
demonstrations began in Lebanon and Iraq, forcing governments in both
countries to agree to resign. The three protest movements have sought to
end corruption, perceived to be widespread among the political elite.
Rapidly deteriorating economic
conditions in Iraq, Lebanon and Iran have meant that the protesters have
a clear common cause. But the similarities may go beyond economy. Both
Iraq and Lebanon are in Iran's sphere of influence, and protests against
the status quo could weaken Tehran's sway in both countries.
In Iraq, the Iranian-backed Popular
Mobilization Units, which wield significant political influence, have
responded violently to protesters. Hundreds have been killed in those
protests. In Lebanon, Hezbollah initially suggested protests there were
part of an international conspiracy against the Iranian-backed militant
and political group. But Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah has since
backed the anti-corruption protesters in recent speeches.
Last month, Khamenei accused US and
Western intelligence services of "spreading turmoil" in Iraq and
Lebanon. He also recalled Iran's response to its 2018 protests, praising
the armed forces for "neutralizing" "similar plans" for Iran.
It is unclear whether the protests will
do lasting damage to Iran's standing in the region, but its response --
from force to internet blackouts -- suggests that the unrest has
unnerved Tehran.


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