18 October 2006

No broadband, no problem?

In yet another attempt to restrict western influence and stifle dissent the Iranian government has announced that it is banning high-speed internet links. Service providers have been told to restrict online speeds to 128 kilobytes a second and been forbidden from offering fast broadband packages. The move by Iran's telecommunications regulator will make it more difficult to download foreign music, films and television programmes. It will also impede efforts by political opposition groups to organise by uploading information on to the net.


The order follows a purge on illegal satellite dishes, which millions of Iranians use to clandestinely watch western television. Police have seized thousands of dishes in recent months. The latest step has drawn condemnation from MPs, internet service companies and academics, who say it will hamper Iran's progress. "Every country in the world is moving towards modernisation and a major element of this is high-speed internet access," said Ramazan-ali Sedeghzadeh, chairman of the parliamentary telecommunications committee. "The country needs it for development and access to contemporary science."

The crackdown comes in an atmosphere of increasing restrictions on the media. Last week, Mr Ahmadinejad launched a fierce attack on the head of the state broadcasting organisation, IRIB, which he blamed for stoking public fears about inflation. Iran's leading reformist newspaper, Shargh, was also closed last month.

5 comments:

SnoopyTheGoon said...

A vibrant democracy, according to Ssimob Jenkins. What do ya know...

SnoopyTheGoon said...

Ssimob? Two typos in one word? I need that coffee. Simon, methinks.

jams o donnell said...

Vibrant once you ban the progressives (or as close to progressive as Iranian politicians can come) from standing (or running), Snoopy! Ssimb looks rather better!

Nor in chaos clash, but it it a repressive step by a repressive ruling clique

Anonymous said...

My sister lived in Iran shortly before the revolution. They used to show 'Coronation Street' dubbed into Farsi.

How times have changed...

jams o donnell said...

LOL the mind boggles how they translated Albert Tatlock into Farsi!