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BBC News

May 2, 2026

A white rectangular Starlink device rests inside a brown cardboard box. The hands of a person wearing thin blue plastic gloves and dark clothing are touching it at the edges, as if lifting it out of the box.
BBC Newsby Reha Kansara·May 2, 2026

Smuggling Starlink tech into Iran to beat the internet blackout

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Political leanright 0.14
Source quality66/100
Factual ratio71/100
Framing62/100

17 minutes agoReha KansaraBBC Global Disinformation UnitBBCSahand packs a Starlink terminal he is preparing to send to Iran"If even one extra person is able to access the internet, I think it's successful and it's worth it," says Sahand.The Iranian man is visibly anxious, speaking to the BBC outside Iran, as he carefully explains how he is part of a clandestine network smuggling satellite internet technology - which is illegal in Iran - into the country.Sahand, whose name we have changed, fears for family members and other contacts inside the country. "If I was identified by the Iranian regime, they might make those I'm in touch with in Iran pay the price," he says.For more than two months, Iran has been in digital darkness as the government maintains one of the longest-running national internet shutdowns ever recorded worldwide.The current blackout began after the US and Israel launched airstrikes on 28 February. Before that, internet access had been partially restored for just a month following a previous digital shutdown in January, imposed during a deadly regime crackdown on nationwide protests. More than 6,500 protesters were killed and 53,000 arrested, according to the US-based Human Rights Activists News Agency (HRANA).Officials say the government

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Lean: 0.139 · Source quality 66/100 · Factual vs opinion 71/100.

Score signature

Political lean

Political leanright 0.14Source quality66/100Factual ratio71/100Framing62/100

Methodology

v2-canonical
100
Source diversity
across 1 outlet
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