“If we are able to get only one extra individual to entry the web, then we have succeeded. It is price it,” Sahand says.
An Iranian man is clearly frightened as he fastidiously explains to the BBC exterior Iran how he’s a part of a secret community that smuggles satellite tv for pc web expertise (unlawful in Iran) into the nation.
Sahand, whose title we now have modified, is frightened about his household and different contacts within the nation.
“If I am recognized by the Iranian regime, I would make those that have contacts with me in Iran pay a worth,” he says.
The Iranian authorities has maintained one of many longest nationwide web shutdowns ever recorded globally, leaving the nation in digital darkness for greater than two months.
The present energy outage started after the US and Israel started airstrikes on February twenty eighth. Beforehand, web entry had been partially restored for only a month after the earlier digital shutdown in January, imposed throughout the federal government’s lethal crackdown on nationwide protests.
Greater than 6,500 protesters have been killed and 53,000 arrested, based on the US-based Human Rights Activists Information Company (HRANA).
Officers say the federal government shut down the web for safety causes in the course of the warfare, suggesting the aim was to forestall surveillance, espionage and cyberattacks.
The Starlink gear Sahand sends to Iran is without doubt one of the most dependable methods to keep away from a shutdown. The flat white machine is paired with a router and supplies web entry by connecting to a satellite tv for pc community owned by Elon Musk’s SpaceX firm, permitting customers to utterly bypass Iran’s tightly managed home web.
Sahand stated a number of individuals can join to every terminal on the similar time.
He stated he and others in his community had been shopping for them and “smuggling them throughout the border” in a “very complicated operation”, with out offering additional particulars.
Sahand stated he has despatched greater than a dozen planes to Iran since January and is “actively searching for different methods to smuggle extra.”
Human rights group Witness estimated in January that there have been a minimum of 50,000 Starlink terminals in Iran. Activists say the quantity may very well be even larger. The BBC contacted SpaceX for particulars about its use of Starlink within the nation, however didn’t obtain a response.
Final 12 months, the Iranian authorities handed a legislation that might make utilizing, shopping for or promoting Starlink units punishable by as much as two years in jail. Distributing or importing greater than 10 units can lead to as much as 10 years in jail.
State media has reported a number of instances of arrests for purchasing and promoting Starlink units, together with 4 individuals (two of them foreigners) who had been arrested final month for “importing satellite tv for pc web gear.” There are stories that a few of these arrested embrace fees of possessing unlawful weapons and transmitting info to the enemy.

Nevertheless, the marketplace for units in Iran continues, together with a Persian-language public telegram channel referred to as NasNet.
A volunteer with the channel from exterior Iran advised the BBC that round 5,000 Starlink units have been bought via the channel previously two-and-a-half years.
Iran has a protracted historical past of controlling info, together with spreading its personal anti-American and anti-Israel rhetoric via state media and proscribing reporting on repressive measures utilized by the regime in opposition to Iranian critics.
However stories and video proof of extrajudicial killings, arrests, and assaults trickled out regardless of an web blackout in the course of the January protests. A lot of this info is understood or believed by human rights teams to come back from individuals accessing social media platforms by way of Starlink.
Iran’s present Web atmosphere is alleged to be a “tiered system.”
All Iranians have entry to state-run home networks, in addition to state-run media, the place companies resembling banking, ride-hailing, and meals supply function.
Earlier than the blackout, Iranians additionally had entry to the web around the globe. Nevertheless, many websites and companies, together with Instagram, Telegram, YouTube, and WhatsApp, had been blocked, and the federal government set entry charges larger than home networks.
Many Iranians circumvented the restrictions by utilizing digital personal networks (VPNs), which join customers to web sites via distant servers and conceal their location. These subscriptions additionally drove up prices.
At the moment, beneath the blackout, solely a choose few officers and different people, together with state media journalists, can freely entry the web utilizing so-called “white SIM playing cards.”

Musk stated in 2022 that he was activating Starlink in Iran after extreme web disruptions throughout protests sparked by the in-custody loss of life of Iranian girl Martha Amini.
Since then, its use has elevated, particularly throughout shutdowns.
Now, as authorities step up their seek for Starlink units, Sahand and his community are advising customers to make use of VPNs that use satellite tv for pc expertise to remain incognito. Nevertheless, many individuals can’t afford it, particularly in instances of financial disaster.
Sahand is one in every of three individuals the BBC spoke to who’re stated to be concerned in smuggling Starlink gear.
He stated the actions he’s concerned in, together with the acquisition of units, are funded by individuals who wish to assist Iranians overseas and at dwelling. He stated he has not acquired any funding from any state.
The machine is shipped to a person who we imagine will use it to share the knowledge internationally.
“Individuals want the Web to have the ability to share what’s taking place within the area,” Sahand stated. “We imagine these units must be within the palms of the individuals who actually need them to make a distinction.”

Digital rights teams advised the BBC on situation of anonymity that they estimate a minimum of 100 individuals have been arrested for possessing the units.
Sahand stated he is aware of of people that have been arrested for accessing or possessing the units, however that nobody obtained them via Sahand.
Iranian-American Yasmin (we now have additionally modified her title) advised the BBC {that a} man in her household had been arrested in Iran and charged with espionage for possessing a Starlink machine.
The BBC requested the Iranian embassy in London why solely a small variety of individuals are allowed entry to the web in Iran, and why the penalties for utilizing Starlink are so extreme, however acquired no solutions.
However Iran’s authorities has acknowledged that the shutdown has hit some companies exhausting, with a minister saying in January that every day financial losses from web blackouts had been a minimum of 50 trillion rials ($35 million, £28 million).
The corporate just lately launched a program referred to as “Web Professional” that offers sure firms restricted entry to the worldwide Web.
A person working for an Iranian firm advised the BBC he was given entry via the initiative.
Authorities spokeswoman Fatemeh Mohajerani stated the intention was “to keep up enterprise connectivity in the course of the disaster”. He additionally stated the federal government was “completely against telecommunications fraud” and that “the web panorama will change” as soon as the state of affairs returns to regular.
“The communications blackout is a transparent violation of human rights and might by no means be justified,” Marwa Fatahta, director of regional coverage and advocacy at digital rights group Entry Now, advised the BBC World Service forward of World Press Freedom Day on Could 3.
She warns that web blackouts have gotten the “new regular”. In 2025, that quantity will attain 313 instances in 52 international locations, the very best quantity worldwide because it began monitoring it in 2016, based on Entry Now.
Roya Borroumand, govt director of the Abdullahman Borroumand Middle for Human Rights, stated Iran’s info vacuum “permits the state to broadcast its personal narrative, portraying protesters as perpetrators of violence and overseas brokers, whereas silencing victims and sources, together with these sentenced to loss of life.”
This can be a massive motivation for Sahand.
“The Iranian regime has confirmed that it may possibly kill individuals throughout a authorities shutdown,” he says. “It is vitally vital for Iranians to have the ability to paint a real image of the state of affairs on the bottom.”
He stated individuals who voluntarily register to assist with smuggling “know the dangers.” However he added, “This can be a battle,” including, “We really feel like we now have to step in and assist indirectly.”
