איראן שטעלט צוריק די אינטערנעט פארבינדונג, אבער באהאלט דעם אמת איבער די ארעסטירטע פראטעסטירער וואס האבן זיך ארויסגעשטעלט קעגן די רעגירונג.
Iran has reportedly begun restoring internet access across parts of the country after an unprecedented 88-day nationwide blackout triggered by anti-government protests earlier this year. Despite reconnecting citizens online, the regime is still heavily restricting access to information related to the arrests of protesters and organizers, fueling accusations that Tehran is once again using censorship and fear to crush dissent while hiding the full scale of its crackdown from the outside world.
The Iranian regime has repeatedly relied on internet shutdowns during periods of unrest, including the infamous 2019 “Bloody November” protests, the twelve-day conflict period in 2025, and the nationwide demonstrations that erupted in January 2026. Human rights activists and supporters of President Donald Trump blasted the regime’s tactics as proof that Iran’s ruling mullahs remain deeply hostile to freedom, transparency, and basic civil liberties while continuing to silence citizens demanding change.
Critics argue the partial restoration of internet access is little more than a controlled propaganda maneuver designed to calm international scrutiny without allowing Iranians to fully expose the arrests, disappearances, and alleged abuses tied to the recent protests. Pro-Israel voices and conservative leaders across the West warned that Tehran’s leadership continues to operate through intimidation, censorship, and repression while left-wing activists in the United States and Europe remain reluctant to fully confront the regime’s long record of human rights violations and regional destabilization.
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