Iran Is
Cut Off From Internet as Protests Calling for Regime Change Intensify
As
protests swelled around the country, Iran’s internet was shut down, and the
heads of its judiciary and its security services warned of a harsh response
amid calls for “freedom, freedom.”
By Farnaz
FassihiPranav Baskar and Sanam Mahoozi
Jan. 8,
2026
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/08/world/middleeast/iran-protests-internet-shutdown.html
Iran
plunged into an internet blackout on Thursday, monitoring groups said, as
nationwide protests demanding the ouster of the Islamic government spread to
multiple cities and grew in size, according to witnesses.
The
internet shutdown came a day after the heads of Iran’s judiciary and its
security services said they would take tough measures against anyone
protesting. But the threats did not deter demonstrators.
In
telephone interviews, more than a dozen witnesses said that they saw large
crowds forming on Thursday night in neighborhoods across Tehran, the capital,
and in cities around Iran, including Mashhad, Bushehr, Shiraz and Isfahan. They
said the crowds were diverse, with men and women, young and old. The people
interviewed inside Iran asked that their names not be published out of fear of
retribution.
One
resident of Tehran said that the crowds were chanting, “Death to Khamenei,”
referring to Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and “freedom,
freedom.” The chants could be heard from several blocks away in the affluent
neighborhood of Shahrak Gharb in Tehran, which had until now sat out the
protests.
Videos
filmed on Thursday night showed government buildings on fire across the
country, including in Tehran, as protests grew. While the protests were mostly
peaceful early in the evening, violence broke out later in the night in Tehran,
with demonstrators setting fire to cars, buildings and items in the street. A
video verified by The New York Times shows fires in the streets of Kaj Square
in the capital, with thousands of protesters flooding the area.
In Karaj,
a suburb west of Tehran, a video verified by The Times showed protesters
fleeing after gunshots were fired, though it is unclear from the videos whether
it was security forces firing.
As the
protests grew, internet connectivity data showed an abrupt and near-total drop
in connection levels in Iran on Thursday afternoon, according to NetBlocks, an
internet monitoring group, and the Georgia Institute of Technology’s Internet
Outage Detection and Analysis database. The data indicates that the country is
almost completely offline.
Iranian
officials did not immediately respond to questions about the cause of the
shutdown, but the government has previously enforced internet blackouts during
moments of crisis. During the country’s 12-day war with Israel last June, Iran
blocked access to the internet, saying that it was a necessary security measure
to stop Israeli infiltration. That measure also cut off the flow of information
outward to the rest of the world.
“The
Iranian government uses internet shutdowns as a tool of repression,” said Omid
Memarian, an Iranian human rights expert and senior fellow at DAWN, a
Washington-based organization focused on the Middle East. “Whenever protests
reach a critical point, authorities sever the country’s connection to the
global internet to isolate protesters and limit their communication with the
outside world.”
Iranians
have been protesting against the authoritarian rule of the Islamic clerics for
decades, in wave after wave of protests that have been repeatedly crushed.
The
latest round of protests began a week ago. Multiple opposition groups,
including Kurdish political groups, the Coordination Council of Azerbaijani
Parties and Reza Pahlavi, the son of the deposed Shah of Iran, had all called
for people inside Iran to take to the streets. Mr. Pahlavi had said in a video
message that people opposing the government should come to the streets at 8
p.m. on Thursday.
Pro-democracy
activists, such as the Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Narges Mohammadi, who is
currently in detention, said in a statement with 17 prominent dissidents and
film directors last week that the demand for democracy could not be quashed.
A
resident in the southern city of Bushehr said the crowd was so large there that
the security forces retreated.
A
resident of Isfahan said that as a crowd of protesters marched, drivers honked
and waved, and people in nearby apartment building whistled in solidarity.
A
resident of Sadeghiyeh, a middle-class neighborhood in Tehran, said the crowd
was swelling in size by the hour. He said security forces had fired their weapons into the air and
fired tear gas canisters, but did not disperse the crowd. He said that some
people in the crowd chanted, “Long live the Shah,” a reference to the last
monarch in Iran, who was toppled in the 1979 revolution.
Ebrahim
Azizi, the head of the Parliament’s national security and foreign policy
committee, said in a post on social media that the “Zionist regime” — referring
to Israel — was behind the protests. “The destabilization puzzle has been
activated; a puzzle that the Iranian nation will not allow to be completed,” he
added.
A senior
government official, who did not want to be identified, said in an interview
that many officials were privately calling and texting one another, at a loss
of how to contain the avalanche of protests. He said the Revolutionary Guards
Corps, typically in charge of securing Iran’s borders not internal security,
would likely take over.
The
slogans chanted by the crowd covered an array of political views but with one
united target: the end of the Islamic regime.
Amir Ali,
a 32-year-old businessman in Tehran, said he and a group of friends had joined
the protests and chanted, “death to the oppressor, be it king or supreme
leader,” and “the street will prevail, the people will win.”
Shima, a
52-year-old from Tehran, said she and her husband, her teenager children and
her elderly parents were all on the streets Thursday night protesting for the
first time as a family and chanting, “we are together, we are together, don’t
be afraid,” and “clerics, get lost, the shah is coming back.”
As the
protest movement has spread to cities across the country, the head of Iran’s
judiciary, Gholam-Hossein Mohseni-Eje’i, told Iranian media that the protests
were plotted by the country’s enemy and the government would show no mercy.
“This
time it’s different. This time there are no excuses left,” he said. “The enemy
has officially announced its support. I tell the people and the families that
this time no one will be spared.”
Amnesty
International said in a statement on Thursday that it had documented at least
28 protesters killed in the recent days of protest, including children. Three
other groups that document and track human rights — HRANA, based in Washington,
Iran Human Rights based in Norway and the Hengaw Organization for Human Rights
— put the toll higher, at more than 40.
Amirparsa
Neshat, an Iranian influencer and podcaster who supports the protests, was
arrested when security forces raided his home in the middle of the night, Kaveh
Rad, a lawyer and one of his relatives, announced on his Instagram on Thursday
morning.
On
Wednesday, a crowd of several hundred men stormed into a Shia seminary that
trains clerics in the city of Gonabad, ransacking the building and beating up
the clerics with “wood and batons,” said a statement from the cleric who
directs the seminary, which was published in Iranian media. “We, too, are
protesting the high prices, but protests are different than riots, people must
part ways with rioters,” said the statement from the cleric, Hujjat al-Islam
Ismaeil Tavakoli.
Merchants
and business owners in the traditional bazaars in the cities of Tehran, Tabriz,
Isfahan, Mashhad and Kerman have closed their shops to protest the dire state
of the economy and the plunging value of Iran’s currency, according to
interviews with witnesses and Iranian news media reports. These bazaars are at
the heart of the country’s commerce and economy, and strikes could paralyze the
economy if they continued.
Leily
Nikounazar contributed reporting from Belgium and Aric Toler contributed from
Kansas City.
Farnaz
Fassihi is the United Nations bureau chief for The Times, leading coverage of
the organization. She also covers Iran and has written about conflict in the
Middle East for 15 years.
Pranav
Baskar is an international reporter and a member of the 2025-26 Times
Fellowship class, a program for journalists early in their careers.


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