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Home Local News Iranians Turn to Turkey’s Border for Internet Access Amid Blackouts

Iranians Turn to Turkey’s Border for Internet Access Amid Blackouts

Iranians use Turkey border to access internet during blackouts
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Published on 17 January 2026
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KAPIKOY BORDER CROSSING – While the Kapikoy border crossing in Turkey’s Van province has not experienced a significant surge of Iranians fleeing unrest, it has become a temporary escape route for many seeking to bypass domestic communication blocks.

Since January 8, internet services in Iran have been severely restricted amid widespread protests and governmental suppression. However, reports from Saturday indicate a brief resumption of text messaging and limited internet access in select regions.

Although protests have largely diminished and a fragile calm prevails in Iran, the persistent communication shutdowns pose challenges, especially for those dependent on online connectivity for their livelihoods.

Iranians can enter Turkey without needing a visa, making it feasible for those in the northern regions or with the resources to travel from further away to make short border trips to access better communication networks.

To finance these trips, some Iranians have resorted to selling items like cigarettes and tea, which are inexpensive in Iran but command higher prices in Turkey.

Sami Ranjbar from Tehran, who was crossing from Turkey back into Iran on Friday, said he works in e-commerce and had stayed in Van for four days to catch up on business.

“My work depends on the internet, so I am forced to come here to access it and do my work, and then return to Iran to see how conditions develop,” he said. “If the internet is restored, we will stay, if not, we will be forced to come out again to use the internet, and go to neighboring countries or elsewhere.”

Ali, 37, who spoke on condition of not being identified by his full name out of security concerns, was headed back to Tehran on Saturday after staying in Turkey for four days. He said he came with his brother, who needed to use the internet for university applications.

“A lot of our friends are arrested in Iran, and some of them have been killed,” he said. “But we have to go back to Iran because we have our family there and we have jobs there.”

The crackdown on protests that began Dec. 28 over Iran’s ailing economy has left at least 3,095 people dead, according to the U.S.-based Human Rights Activists News Agency.

Ali said he had complicated feelings about the situation in his country, supporting neither the current authorities nor any of the alternatives on offer.

“We are under a dictatorship, but we are also in danger of war from Israel and other countries,” he said. “I’m not OK with being attacked by other countries, but I’m not OK at all with my government.”

Residents of the area of northeastern Iran near the border crossing said life returned largely to business as usual following little unrest. The area is conservative, with a large population of ethnic Turks and Azeris.

Many Iranian travelers coming from the north said they see the protests in Tehran and other areas as having little to do with them, and some echoed the Iranian government allegations that the unrest was seeded by the U.S. and Israel.

“It’s true that people are struggling financially. But that is because of the things America and Israel are doing,” said Milad Soleimani, 28, who came from the Iranian town of Qatur, 8 kilometers (5 miles) from the border gate, for a day’s shopping, speaking in Turkish. “The majority supports their state. It doesn’t matter if you have 2 million Pahlavi supporters in a nation of 94 million.”

Iranian Turks and Azeris are largely averse to exiled Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi, who has been hoping to stage a return and has urged protesters into the streets. Ethnic minorities were repressed under Pahlavi’s father, Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi, who was overthrown in the 1979 Islamic Revolution that ushered in the current Islamic Republic. Many Iranians from the north said they preferred the stability under the current regime over unrest and ambiguity.

“Iran is stable, that’s what is good about it,” said Afshin, 24, a Turkish-speaking Kurdish traveler from the northeastern Iranian city of Khoy, who gave only his first name out of security concerns. “If there is a civil war, the country will split into 80 pieces.”

Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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