What Bangladesh Can Learn from Iran's Internet Shutdown: Maintaining Accessibility During Civil Unrest
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What Bangladesh Can Learn from Iran's Internet Shutdown: Maintaining Accessibility During Civil Unrest

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2026-04-07
17 min read
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Lessons from Iran’s blackout: how Bangladesh can protect digital rights and keep people connected during unrest.

What Bangladesh Can Learn from Iran's Internet Shutdown: Maintaining Accessibility During Civil Unrest

When a country severs internet access at scale, the consequences ripple across civic life, public health, the economy and trust in institutions. Iran's large-scale shutdown during recent unrest offers a stark case study: rapid, broad-scale disconnection creates immediate safety risks, economic losses, and long-term harm to digital rights. For Bangladesh — a country with dense urban populations, a rapidly growing digital economy, and a politically engaged public — the Iran experience holds urgent lessons. This guide translates those lessons into practical, evidence-based recommendations for government policy, telecom operators, civil society and everyday users to preserve accessibility and protect rights during crises.

1. Overview: Why Iran's Blackout Matters to Bangladesh

What happened in Iran: scope and impact

In Iran, authorities implemented a near‑nationwide internet blackout during major protests, restricting access to social platforms and blocking international routing. The blackout lasted days in many regions, isolating communities and complicating emergency responses. The targeting was sophisticated: selective throttling, DNS interference and wholesale cuts at peering points, techniques known to network engineers but opaque to the general public. The speed and scale of those measures underscore the technical and operational preparedness a state can marshal when it decides to limit connectivity.

Why Bangladesh should care

Bangladesh is different in economy and governance, but not immune to civil unrest and the temptation to control communications. Dhaka’s dense clusters, high smartphone penetration and reliance on online services make shutdowns especially disruptive. Lessons from Iran are therefore directly applicable: authorities and stakeholders in Bangladesh must plan to avoid the harm of blanket cuts while balancing public order concerns. For context on urban vulnerabilities and sectoral risk, see our analysis of how shocks affect local sectors such as insurance and business continuity in Dhaka: The State of Commercial Insurance in Dhaka.

Key takeaways for policymakers

Policymakers should recognize three immediate takeaways: first, shutdowns cause disproportionate harm to vulnerable populations; second, they create long-lasting economic damage; and third, they often worsen the very instability they aim to control by driving rumours into unregulated channels. These lessons argue for narrowly tailored, legally accountable, and transparent measures rather than blunt disconnection. Supplementary frameworks like rapid alerts and transparent reporting help reduce the perceived need for draconian measures — a subject we explore further below and relate to monitoring systems used in other domains such as economic alerts (CPI Alert System).

2. Immediate humanitarian and civic impacts

Emergency services and life-critical communications

Internet shutdowns interrupt more than social media; they can sever emergency call routing, remote medical consultations and transport coordination. In Iran, people reported difficulty contacting ambulances or family in lockdown zones. For Dhaka, where ambulance services and traffic management increasingly rely on online dispatch and mapping systems, even short disruptions can endanger lives. Municipal emergency planners should assume internet access will be a critical infrastructure dependency and craft redundancy plans accordingly.

Freedom of expression and access to information

Cutting access to the internet is a blunt restriction on information flows and freedom of expression. Journalists, civil society groups and ordinary citizens lose the means to document events, challenge falsehoods, and access independent reporting. Governments that commit to protecting digital rights should consider the long-term reputational and governance costs of suppressing open channels and weigh these against any short-term security gains.

Economic disruptions and livelihoods

Small businesses, gig workers and digital creators are immediate losers during shutdowns. Bangladesh’s creator economy and e‑commerce depend on web payments, delivery coordination and communications that disappear when access is cut. Financial losses compound into trust deficits: consumers and international partners may delay investment when connectivity is unreliable. A useful lens for thinking about shocks on local industries is how emergent disasters affect other sectors, such as entertainment and commerce during crises (Weathering the Storm).

3. The technical anatomy of internet shutdowns

How governments technically restrict connectivity

There are several technical pathways to limit internet access. Authorities can order ISPs to implement DNS blocks, null routes, BGP announcements to cut peering, or order physical disconnection at local exchanges. In some cases authorities coerce major carriers to throttle ports or block protocols selectively. Understanding these mechanisms helps engineers and policymakers design effective countermeasures and auditing tools, and it helps civil society explain impacts to the public clearly.

Targeted versus blanket shutdowns

Shutdowns come in flavors: targeted (blocking specific services or throttling certain traffic) or blanket (national-level disconnection). Targeted measures may aim to reduce coordination among protesters while leaving critical services intact, but they are technically difficult to implement without collateral damage. Blanket cuts are easier to implement but costlier. Bangladesh policymakers should prioritize rules and technical guidance that avoid blanket measures and instead set strict, time‑limited criteria for any service restriction.

Workarounds and their limits

Users and organizations sometimes adopt circumvention tools like VPNs, satellite connectivity, or mesh networks to bypass blocks. Technical workarounds have limitations: they require technical literacy, cost, and often become targets for further blocking. Hardware modifications like eSIM or AirSIM-related tools can offer novel pathways; for instance, hardware developers exploring unique SIM adaptations have highlighted the potential and limits of device-level innovation (The iPhone Air SIM modification).

International norms and human rights standards

International law and human rights bodies increasingly treat connectivity as essential for rights to expression, health and life. Judges and oversight bodies have demanded strong procedural safeguards before states curtail communications. Bangladesh should align domestic policy with international norms to ensure any limitations are lawful, necessary and proportionate. Transparency mechanisms and accessible explanations for any interference reduce mistrust and help maintain public order.

Judicial oversight and procedural guardrails

One practical reform is mandatory judicial review or parliamentary notification for any ordered communication suspension. Fast-track judicial procedures for national security claims can be designed with technical experts to assess proportionality. Such guardrails create accountability and provide documented rationales for decisions that may affect millions of users.

Transparency reporting and auditing

Telecom operators should publish regular transparency reports about government orders and network disruptions. Independent monitoring groups and technical observatories can verify events and timelines. Tools and models from other domains — such as event-driven reporting and alerting systems used in financial monitoring — illustrate how transparent thresholds and public dashboards improve trust (CPI Alert System).

5. Economic resilience: minimizing losses when connectivity falters

Direct economic costs and cascading losses

Shutdowns impose immediate transaction losses for digital payments, logistics delays for delivery services, and productivity losses for remote work. Over time these losses erode investor confidence and can depress sectors like retail, fintech and remittances. Governments must quantify likely economic impacts as part of any decision to disrupt communications, making decisions with cost-benefit clarity.

Insurance, contingency planning and business continuity

Businesses and municipal services should incorporate outage scenarios into continuity plans. The insurance market in Dhaka already explores systemic risks from disasters; those mechanisms can extend to communication outages. Read our assessment of local insurance-market lessons for urban resilience in Dhaka to design sectoral continuity strategies: The State of Commercial Insurance in Dhaka.

Supporting small businesses and creators

Small entrepreneurs and digital creators lack deep reserves to survive multi‑day blackouts. Government and donor programs can offer emergency grants, offline payment alternatives, or guaranteed access corridors for essential services. The broader lesson: protecting the creative and small‑business ecosystem protects livelihoods and reduces long-term social pressure.

6. Protecting digital rights and countering misinformation

Civil society organizations should be part of contingency planning and dispute resolution processes. Advocacy groups can push for clearer statutes and emergency rules that limit the state’s discretion to sever access. They also play a vital role documenting abuses and helping affected communities seek redress.

Media literacy and fighting disinformation

When normal channels are down or degraded, rumours and misinformation expand into SMS, word of mouth and offline networks. Investing in media literacy, trusted local messengers and official rapid fact-checking portals reduces panic and the demand for blunt censorship. Lessons from reputation-management challenges in the digital age reinforce that transparency reduces the space for harmful rumours (Addressing Reputation Management).

Open monitoring and independent verification

Independent technical observatories, journalists and research institutions can verify outages and publication of facts reduces speculation. Integrating technical telemetry with verified reporting creates a public record that holds authorities and carriers accountable. Cultural and creative sectors must also be protected: when media production is at risk, broader cultural representation suffers (Overcoming Creative Barriers).

7. Operational continuity: technical measures to keep people connected

Redundant routing and international peering safeguards

Telecoms can build redundancy by diversifying international gateways, using multiple undersea routes and negotiating diverse peering agreements. Regulators can encourage or require minimum redundancy levels for national providers as part of license conditions. Diversified peering reduces the chance that a single directive or physical cut can disable connectivity nationwide.

Satellite, temporary cells and alternative hardware

Satellite connectivity (VSAT, low-earth-orbit providers) and deployable cell sites (COWs) can provide limited connectivity in emergencies. Device-level solutions including advanced SIM strategies and eSIM/AirSIM device modifications have been explored by hardware developers as possible complements during restricted conditions (iPhone Air SIM insights). However, such measures face regulatory, cost and scale challenges.

Local networks, caching and offline information systems

Local intranets, caching of critical government and health information, and offline messaging platforms can maintain essential information flows even if global connectivity is down. Mesh networks and community Wi‑Fi can bridge short-term gaps, but they require pre‑deployment, training and legal clarity. Technology for intentional wellness and simplified digital tools emphasizes designing systems that remain useful under degraded conditions (Simplifying Technology).

8. Communication strategy during unrest: who says what, and how

Government communication best practices

Transparent, frequent and factual communication by authorities reduces panic. Proactive briefings, clear timelines for any measures, and channels for independent verification are essential. Political leaders and agencies can learn from public communication norms used during high-profile events — even press theatre has lessons about consistency and clarity in official messaging (A Peek Behind the Curtain).

Media and reporters’ safety

Journalists must be able to report without undue interference. Legal protections for reporters, secure communication tools and evacuation protocols for correspondents in hotspot areas reduce risks. When the flow of independent information is restricted, the longer-term costs to public trust and accountability increase.

Public preparedness and mental health

Authorities and civil society should prepare citizens for contingency scenarios: basic guides on what to do during outages, where to access verified information, and how to contact emergency services. Mental health support is also critical: prolonged unrest and information blackouts raise stress and trauma, a phenomenon explored in studies of political stress and mental health impacts (The Trump Effect).

9. Policy recommendations for Bangladesh (actionable checklist)

Bangladesh should codify strict criteria for restrictions: time limits, judicial oversight, transparency reporting and defined appeal mechanisms. Laws that permit emergency action without checks enable abuse; carefully drafted statutes limit arbitrary use. International best practices recommend requiring public reporting on any order with anonymized rationales and impact assessments.

Technical preparedness and infrastructure investment

Regulators must require redundancy in international gateways, encourage multi-homing of critical services, and incentivize private sector investments in satellite and mobile deployment technologies. Investments in local caching, mesh networking pilots, and emergency broadcast systems improve resilience. For ideas on infrastructural innovation in transport and travel contexts, see historical lessons on tech in transit hubs (Tech and Travel).

Civil society partnerships and awareness

Formalize channels for civil society input into emergency communication plans, and fund public education campaigns on digital safety and verification. Partnerships between government, NGOs and tech firms can develop quick-response information hubs, fact-checking centers and offline distribution networks during degraded connectivity. These collaborative efforts reduce the political pressure to implement blanket shutdowns.

10. Case studies: Iran and comparative perspectives

Iran: timeline, tools and immediate outcomes

Iran’s shutdowns combined selective platform blocks and broader ISP-level cuts, creating immediate reporting blackholes and economic disruption. Independent monitoring showed sharp declines in remittances, e‑commerce and communications during blackout windows. The event highlighted how rapid government action with limited oversight can produce large social and economic costs, and how documentation by civil society later provided an evidentiary record.

Other shutdowns: contrasts and common patterns

Comparing Iran with past shutdowns (for instance in parts of Africa and South Asia) shows common patterns: initial political intent to control coordination; escalation when media or misinformation spreads; and eventual economic and reputational costs. Some countries have adopted partial access strategies or time-limited measures with better outcomes, while others relied on prolonged cuts with deep damage.

What worked: partial access, safeguards and rapid restoration

Partial measures that preserve emergency services, financial rails and health communication perform better on humane and economic criteria. Quick restoration, transparent review and public explanations correlate with faster recovery of trust. In other fields, adaptive strategies that favor redundancy and modular operations have improved resilience, an approach seen in evolving business models and recovery plans (Adaptive Business Models).

Pro Tip: Mandate that any emergency communications restriction include an explicit plan for preserving at least: (1) emergency services, (2) financial transaction channels, and (3) verified public information pipelines. These three preserves minimize life-threatening harm while allowing tailored law enforcement actions.

11. Practical steps for organisations and citizens

For government agencies

Create a multi-stakeholder crisis communications protocol, publish it publicly, and rehearse it with civil society and telecom operators. Establish rapid judicial review and data-driven thresholds for any restriction. Invest in training for public information officers to use offline and low-bandwidth channels effectively during disruptions.

For telecom operators

Design and publish resilience plans, implement diverse peering, and resist orders to execute blanket shutdowns unless legally mandated and time-limited. Operators should also maintain independent technical logs, cooperate with independent monitors for transparency, and pilot satellite or temporary cell deployments. Lessons from hardware innovators highlight that device‑level adaptations are helpful but not a substitute for systemic safeguards (AirSIM insights).

For civil society and newsrooms

Archive and mirror critical public interest information, train reporters in secure comms, and create offline reporting chains. Invest in community-level information points and work with local leaders to ensure marginalized groups can receive verified updates. Creative sectors should also plan contingencies to preserve cultural expression and accurate reporting (Sound Bites and Outages).

12. Measuring success: indicators and monitoring

Key performance indicators for resilience

Indicators should include time to restoration for essential services, transparency scores for published orders, economic impact measures (daily transaction volume losses), and user‑level accessibility statistics. Independent auditors and technical observatories should publish periodic assessments tied to these KPIs to keep stakeholders accountable.

Early-warning systems and alerting

Adapting practices from other alert domains, authorities and civic monitors can implement threshold-based alerts for service degradation and escalate mitigation steps automatically. Designing thresholds and public dashboards like those used in some economic alert systems improves pre‑emptive action and avoids surprise shutdowns (CPI Alert System).

Community-level feedback loops

Establish channels for citizens to report localized outages and service disruptions. Localized reporting helps distinguish between infrastructure failure and policy-driven cuts, which is essential for targeted remediation. Initiatives that focus on user-friendly, low-tech reporting interfaces reduce friction and increase participation, similar to how transport studies use passenger feedback to adjust service planning (Commuting insights).

Dimension What Iran did (observed) Recommended approach for Bangladesh
Scope Nationwide and regional wholesale cuts Targeted, narrowly scoped restrictions with judicial sign‑off
Duration Multi‑day, often unspecified Predefined short windows with mandatory review and reporting
Services preserved Often none; broad collateral damage to banking and emergency services Mandate preservation of emergency, banking, and health communication channels
Transparency Limited; little public rationale or documentation at time of cut Public orders, independent audits and operator transparency reports required
Economic impact Significant short-term losses and longer-term investor uncertainty Pre-assessed economic thresholds; compensatory support for SMEs and creators
Technical resilience Limited redundancy; single-point peering exposed Diversified peering, satellite options and local caching required by regulator

14. Practical contingency checklist: what to do now

For policymakers (5 immediate actions)

1) Issue a public commitment to avoid blanket shutdowns and publish criteria for any restriction. 2) Establish fast-track judicial review and mandatory transparency reporting. 3) Mandate minimum redundancy requirements for national carriers. 4) Pre-authorize emergency broadcast channels and offline information distribution. 5) Fund civil society hotlines for verification and legal support.

For telecoms and tech firms (5 immediate actions)

1) Diversify international gateways and document redundancy. 2) Publish transparency reports and keep tamper-evident logs. 3) Create prioritized traffic rules to preserve payments and emergency services. 4) Pilot satellite and temporary cell solutions for contingency. 5) Coordinate with civil society on verification channels.

For citizens and organisations (5 immediate actions)

1) Back up critical contacts offline and learn low-bandwidth comms. 2) Prepare contingency cash and offline transaction plans where possible. 3) Register for verified local alerts and community information points. 4) Participate in local resilience training programs. 5) Support civil society groups documenting and advocating for transparent policies.

FAQ: Common questions about shutdowns and rights

Many countries retain legal mechanisms for restricting communications in emergencies, but legality depends on domestic law, procedural safeguards and compliance with international human rights norms. The key issues are whether restrictions are necessary, proportionate, time‑limited and subject to oversight.

Q2: Can businesses insure against shutdown losses?

Some insurance products cover business interruption, but policies often exclude politically driven shutdowns. Companies should consult insurers, update continuity plans and push for industry-level contingency funds. See our Dhaka insurance analysis for sectoral lessons (Dhaka insurance).

Q3: How effective are VPNs and mesh networks?

VPNs help bypass targeted blocks but are often blocked or unreliable during severe shutdowns. Mesh networks and offline messaging can work locally but require pre-deployment and user training. No workaround is a substitute for systemic safeguards and pre-planned redundancy.

Q4: What should journalists do during a shutdown?

Journalists should prioritize secure, low-bandwidth reporting techniques, coordinate with peers for mirrored publication, and use trusted offline verification channels. Newsrooms should maintain contingency publication plans and training in secure comms.

Q5: How can citizens help maintain accurate information?

Register with verified local information hubs, avoid forwarding unverified rumours, and use official offline points when available. Community leaders and local organisations can act as trusted messengers to keep information flowing responsibly.

15. Final thoughts: balancing security and rights

Iran’s internet blackout is a cautionary tale for Bangladesh: the impulse to control communications during unrest is powerful, but the consequences are widespread and often counterproductive. Bangladesh can preserve public safety while protecting digital rights by adopting narrow, time-bound measures, investing in technical redundancy, and embedding accountability into the decision process. Practical measures — legal reforms, infrastructure investment, public communication improvements, and civil society partnerships — create a framework that reduces the need for blunt shutdowns and protects citizens, businesses and civic life.

Maintaining accessibility during civil unrest is not just a technical challenge; it is a governance choice. The choice Bangladesh makes will shape trust, economic resilience, and international reputation for years. Policymakers, operators, and citizens should take a deliberate approach that privileges transparency, proportionality, and preparedness.

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2026-04-07T01:28:57.323Z