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posted by martyb on Wednesday November 20 2019, @08:07AM   Printer-friendly
from the information-wants-to-be-free dept.

Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:

Iran is offline and has been for three days after the government responded to widespread protests by killing the internet.

Anti-government protests started on Friday when the authorities announced a sudden 50 per cent increase in fuel prices. The protests quickly spread to over 100 cities and towns, reflecting deeper hostility to the authoritarian establishment. That establishment responded by cutting off the internet to 80 million people on Saturday night.

As a result it has been increasingly difficult to follow what is going on inside the country or how many people have been injured or killed. The government has acknowledged three deaths, but there have been at least eight reported and more are expected.

Even with the price increase Iran’s 13 cents a liter gas prices remain among the cheapest in the world, but the decision to raise the price was just one more sign of Iran’s faltering economy, in part due to continued sanctions on the country.

Iran’s response was depressingly predictable - its National Security Council instructed all ISPs to cut off internet access out of “national security interests.”

Despite the ban however, citizens have quickly discovered that Iran runs two internets: a public internet and a separate network that the government and universities are tapped into and which is still operational.

[...] In a worrying sign of what may really be going on, however, the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said in an official statement on Monday that it was planning to take “decisive action” against any further protests, raising the possibility of dozens of deaths as has happened repeatedly in recent years.


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  • (Score: 2) by bzipitidoo on Wednesday November 20 2019, @02:05PM (2 children)

    by bzipitidoo (4388) on Wednesday November 20 2019, @02:05PM (#922355) Journal

    13 cents per liter? What kind of unit is that? If the price is going to be translated to US currencies, why not go all the way and give price per gallon, which is 49 cents? Yes, the US ought to go metric finally, but ... inertia.

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  • (Score: -1, Redundant) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday November 20 2019, @06:46PM

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday November 20 2019, @06:46PM (#922517)

    I ought not to reply to this.

  • (Score: 2) by dry on Thursday November 21 2019, @06:15AM

    by dry (223) on Thursday November 21 2019, @06:15AM (#922881) Journal

    Perhaps its Canadian currency? Seen gas for 122.9 cents a litre today. The problem with gallons is whose do you use, a real gallon defined as 10 lbs or 4.54 kg of water or an obsolete one?