KABUL: Afghanistan faced a second day without Internet and mobile phone service on Tuesday, after Taliban authorities cut the fiber optic network.
Taliban authorities began shutting down high speed Internet connections to some provinces earlier in the month to prevent “vice.”
On Monday night, mobile phone signal and Internet service gradually weakened until connectivity was less than one percent of ordinary levels, according to Internet watchdog NetBlocks.
It is the first time since the Taliban government won their insurgency in 2021 and imposed a strict version of Islamic law that communications have been shut down in the country.
“We are blind without phones and Internet,” said 42-year-old shopkeeper Najibullah in Kabul.
“All our business relies on mobiles. The deliveries are with mobiles. It’s like a holiday, everyone is at home. The market is totally frozen.”
In the minutes before it happened, a government official warned AFP that fiber optic would be cut, affecting mobile phone services too.
“Eight to nine thousand telecommunications pillars” would be shut down, he said, adding that the blackout would last “until further notice.”
“There isn’t any other way or system to communicate... the banking sector, customs, everything across the country will be affected,” said the official who asked not to be named.
Netblocks, a watchdog organization that monitors cybersecurity and Internet governance, said the blackout “appears consistent with the intentional disconnection of service.”
AFP lost all contact with its bureau in the capital Kabul at around 5:45 p.m. (1315 GMT).
“Because of the shutdown, I’m totally disconnected with my family in Kabul,” a 40-year-old Afghan living in Oman said via text message, asking not to be named.
“I don’t know whats happening, Im really worried.”
Telephone services are often routed over the Internet, sharing the same fiber lines, especially in countries with limited telecoms infrastructure.
Over the past weeks, Internet connections have been extremely slow or intermittent.
On September 16, Balkh provincial spokesman Attaullah Zaid said fiber optic Internet was completely banned in the northern province on the Taliban leader’s orders.
“This measure was taken to prevent vice, and alternative options will be put in place across the country to meet connectivity needs,” he wrote on social media.
At the time, AFP correspondents reported the same restrictions in the northern provinces of Badakhshan and Takhar, as well as in Kandahar, Helmand, Nangarhar and Uruzgan in the south.
In 2024, Kabul had touted the 9,350-kilometer fiber optic network – largely built by former US-backed governments – as a “priority” to bring the country closer to the rest of the world and lift it out of poverty.
Taliban impose communications blackout across Afghanistan
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Taliban impose communications blackout across Afghanistan
- On Monday night, mobile phone signal and Internet service gradually weakened until connectivity was less than one percent of ordinary levels
- It is the first time since the Taliban government won their insurgency in 2021 that communications have been shut down in the country
Warmer seas, heavier rains drove Asia floods: scientists
- Warmer seas and heavier rains linked to climate change, along with Indonesia and Sri Lanka’s unique geographies and vulnerabilities, combined to produce deadly flooding that killed hundreds, scientist
BANGKOK:Warmer seas and heavier rains linked to climate change, along with Indonesia and Sri Lanka’s unique geographies and vulnerabilities, combined to produce deadly flooding that killed hundreds, scientists said Thursday.
Two tropical storms dumped massive amounts of rain on the countries last month, prompting landslides and flooding that killed more than 600 people in Sri Lanka and nearly 1,000 in Indonesia.
A rapid analysis of the two weather systems carried out by an international group of scientists found a confluence of factors drove the disaster.
They include heavier rainfall and warmer seas linked to climate change, as well as weather patterns such as La Nina and the Indian Ocean Dipole.
The research could not quantify the precise influence of climate change because models do not fully capture some of the seasonal and regional weather patterns, the scientists said.
Still, they found climate change has made heavy rain events in both regions more intense in recent decades, and that sea surface temperatures are also higher due to climate change.
Warmer oceans can strengthen weather systems and increase the amount of moisture in them.
“Climate change is at least one contributing driver of the observed increase in extreme rainfall,” said Mariam Zachariah, one of the study’s authors and a research associate at Imperial College London.
The analysis, known as an attribution study, uses peer-reviewed methodologies to assess how a warmer climate may impact different weather events.
The scientists found extreme rainfall events in the Malacca Strait region between Malaysia and Indonesia had “increased by an estimated 9-50 percent as a result of rising global temperatures,” said Zachariah.
“Over Sri Lanka, the trends are even stronger, with heavy rainfall events now about 28-160 percent more intense due to the warming we have already experienced,” she told reporters.
While the datasets “showed a wide range,” Zachariah added, “they all point in the same direction, that extreme rainfall events are becoming more intense in both study regions.”
The scientists said other factors were also at play, including deforestation and natural geography that channeled heavy rain into populated flood plains.
The two tropical storms coincided with the monsoon rains across much of Asia, which often brings some flooding.
But the scale of the disaster in the two countries is virtually unprecedented.
“Monsoon rains are normal in this part of the world,” said Sarah Kew, climate researcher at the Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute, and study lead author.
“What is not normal is the growing intensity of these storms and how they are affecting millions of people and claiming hundreds of lives.”
Two tropical storms dumped massive amounts of rain on the countries last month, prompting landslides and flooding that killed more than 600 people in Sri Lanka and nearly 1,000 in Indonesia.
A rapid analysis of the two weather systems carried out by an international group of scientists found a confluence of factors drove the disaster.
They include heavier rainfall and warmer seas linked to climate change, as well as weather patterns such as La Nina and the Indian Ocean Dipole.
The research could not quantify the precise influence of climate change because models do not fully capture some of the seasonal and regional weather patterns, the scientists said.
Still, they found climate change has made heavy rain events in both regions more intense in recent decades, and that sea surface temperatures are also higher due to climate change.
Warmer oceans can strengthen weather systems and increase the amount of moisture in them.
“Climate change is at least one contributing driver of the observed increase in extreme rainfall,” said Mariam Zachariah, one of the study’s authors and a research associate at Imperial College London.
The analysis, known as an attribution study, uses peer-reviewed methodologies to assess how a warmer climate may impact different weather events.
The scientists found extreme rainfall events in the Malacca Strait region between Malaysia and Indonesia had “increased by an estimated 9-50 percent as a result of rising global temperatures,” said Zachariah.
“Over Sri Lanka, the trends are even stronger, with heavy rainfall events now about 28-160 percent more intense due to the warming we have already experienced,” she told reporters.
While the datasets “showed a wide range,” Zachariah added, “they all point in the same direction, that extreme rainfall events are becoming more intense in both study regions.”
The scientists said other factors were also at play, including deforestation and natural geography that channeled heavy rain into populated flood plains.
The two tropical storms coincided with the monsoon rains across much of Asia, which often brings some flooding.
But the scale of the disaster in the two countries is virtually unprecedented.
“Monsoon rains are normal in this part of the world,” said Sarah Kew, climate researcher at the Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute, and study lead author.
“What is not normal is the growing intensity of these storms and how they are affecting millions of people and claiming hundreds of lives.”
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