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Iran’s president orders reopening of international internet access, state media reports

By Thomson Reuters May 25, 2026 | 12:53 PM

May 25 (Reuters) – Iran’s President Masoud Pezeshkian has issued an order to reopen international internet access, Iranian state media ​reported on Monday, citing an ‌official after a near-90-day blackout in the wake of the war against U.S. and Israel.

The report cited the head of public relations at Iran’s ‌Communications ​Ministry.

The mechanism for how ⁠and when Iran would ⁠reconnect to the global web following the decision was unknown.

Most Iranians have been unable to access the worldwide web ​for 87 days according to the internet observatory NetBlocks on Monday, with only ⁠a few citizens having ⁠access to expensive and advanced ​VPNs that circumvent the restrictions.

Authorities initially imposed an ​internet blackout from January 8 in ‌response to nationwide anti-government protests, with connections gradually getting back to normal in February, before a new blackout was initiated following ⁠the start of U.S. and Israeli strikes against Iran on February 28.

In normal times, access to ⁠the ‌global internet remains heavily restricted ⁠via censorship of many websites, while ​authorities ‌are increasingly relying on an ​intranet to ⁠provide connected services without relying on the worldwide web, notably for schools which are currently following an online curriculum.

(Reporting by Menna Alaa El-Din and Parisa Hafezi; Editing by ​Toby Chopra)