Afghan traders in Pakistan hit as Taliban Internet blackout cripples cross-border business

Vehicles loaded with the belongings of Afghan nationals head back to Afghanistan, after Pakistan started to deport documented Afghan refugees, near Torkham border crossing between Pakistan and Afghanistan on September 1, 2025. (REUTERS/File)
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Updated 01 October 2025
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Afghan traders in Pakistan hit as Taliban Internet blackout cripples cross-border business

  • Taliban cut communications this week ‘until further notice,’ halting trade and family contact
  • Aid agencies say the blackout prevents women from accessing online education programs

PESHAWAR: Afghan traders in Pakistan’s northwestern city of Peshawar say their businesses and family ties have been thrown into disarray after Taliban authorities imposed a sweeping Internet blackout across their homeland earlier this week.

Internet connectivity in Afghanistan has dropped to less than one percent of normal levels, according to watchdog NetBlocks, after Taliban supreme leader Hibatullah Akhundzada ordered the shutdown “until further notice” to combat what officials called “vice.”

The outage has worsened conditions in one of the world’s poorest and most war-torn countries, already reeling from decades of conflict, humanitarian crises and a recent earthquake, rights groups said.

“We have big businesses with hotels [in Afghanistan],” Hajji Khan Muhammad, a kitchenware trader at Peshawar’s Board Bazaar near the Afghan border, said. “But our customers, they don’t buy [our products] until we send them pictures.”

He noted that these days businesses are mainly conducted online, with the whole world relying on the Internet.

Other Afghan traders said the blackout had left them unable to recover their payments or speak to their families.

“We can’t talk to our customers,” said Aslam, another Afghan trader who only shared his first name. “We can’t communicate with each other or build relations.”

Abdullah Jan, another Afghan national in the market, said the disruption had cut off vital family contact.

“Everyone is upset,” he continued. “We have relatives, some are someone’s brothers, uncles, some are someone’s mothers, sisters. We were in contact with each other. Now that the Internet is down, communication is also dead.”

Others warned the outage was straining cross-border commerce.

“We are businessmen and we have trades and businesses set up there. They ask us for the items and owe us money. We don’t have visas to go and get our money back from them,” said Javed Khan.

The United Nations has warned of a “very dire situation” with “serious human rights ramifications.”

Aid agencies say the blackout will prevent Afghan women from accessing online education programs, cut remittances and censor media.

At the beginning of 2025, around 13.2 million Afghans – roughly 30 percent of the population – had Internet access, according to the specialist website DataReportal, with more than four million social media users.

Kabul had previously touted its 9,350-kilometer fiber optic network as a way to lift the country out of poverty.


’Super Flu’: Pakistan confirms presence of fast-spreading H3N2 influenza strain

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’Super Flu’: Pakistan confirms presence of fast-spreading H3N2 influenza strain

  • Health authorities say virus is not new but shows higher transmission rate
  • WHO reports global rise in seasonal influenza cases, especially in Europe

ISLAMABAD: Pakistani health authorities on Monday confirmed the presence of the H3N2 influenza strain, often referred to as a fast-spreading “super flu,” in the country, but stressed there was no cause for panic, saying the virus is not new and remains manageable with standard treatment and vaccination.

Officials said the strain is part of seasonal influenza viruses that circulate globally each year and has undergone genetic changes that make it spread more quickly, a pattern health experts say is common for influenza.

The confirmation comes as the World Health Organization (WHO) reports a global increase in seasonal influenza activity in recent months, with a growing proportion of influenza A(H3N2) cases detected, particularly across several European countries, including the United Kingdom.

“Yes, we have witnessed confirmed cases of H3N2 influenza (super Flu) in Pakistan since November this year. Out of total around 1,691 cases reported throughout Pakistan since last month, 12 percent are of the so called super flu,” Dr. Shafiq-Ur-Rahman, Senior Scientific Officer at Pakistan’s Center for Disease Control (CDC), told Arab News.

He said the virus had undergone a genetic drift, a gradual mutation that is typical of influenza viruses. 

“The symptoms are similar to other influenza strains, but speed of transmission is high for H3N2,” Rahman said, adding that treatment remains the same as for other flu types and vaccination is critical to limiting spread.

Seasonal influenza is an acute respiratory infection caused by influenza viruses that circulate year-round worldwide. The WHO has stressed that influenza continues to evolve through gradual genetic changes, making ongoing surveillance and regular vaccine updates essential.

Influenza spreads easily through droplets when infected people cough or sneeze. While most individuals recover within a week without medical treatment, the illness can range from mild to severe and may result in hospitalization or death, particularly among high-risk groups such as young children, older adults, pregnant women and people with underlying health conditions.

Doctors say early symptoms of the flu can resemble those of the common cold, but the progression often differs. Colds typically develop gradually, beginning with a runny or blocked nose, sneezing and sore throat, followed by mild coughing and fatigue.

Flu symptoms, however, tend to appear suddenly and more intensely, with patients often experiencing high fever, extreme tiredness, body aches, headaches and a dry cough.

Health experts say this abrupt and severe onset is usually the clearest indication that an illness is influenza rather than a common cold, which is generally milder and slower to develop.