Starlink is illegal in Iran. Being a foreign journalist is a huge red flag in totalitarian countries, making it harder to smuggle in illegal devices than for the average citizen or visitor. And because journalists are probably under surveillance by the regime, it's harder for them to obtain Starlink terminals in the country than for the average person.
The government was ignoring Starlink until it was being used by western clandestine agencies & Israel to foment violence and burning down property. People were being paid for each act of violence they committed, by those spy agencies.
The Iranian government then used Chinese tech to block Starlink, shutdown the external internet and the violence stopped.
Starlink is illegal in Iran. Being a foreign journalist is a huge red flag in totalitarian countries, making it harder to smuggle in illegal devices than for the average citizen or visitor. And because journalists are probably under surveillance by the regime, it's harder for them to obtain Starlink terminals in the country than for the average person.
The government was ignoring Starlink until it was being used by western clandestine agencies & Israel to foment violence and burning down property. People were being paid for each act of violence they committed, by those spy agencies.
The Iranian government then used Chinese tech to block Starlink, shutdown the external internet and the violence stopped.
> People were being paid for each act of violence they committed, by those spy agencies.
Do you have evidence of this? At least in the USA, mobs angry at the government will conduct arson and property destruction without being paid a dime.
TFA mentions one reason: the "recent Iranian law that would equate the use of Starlink with espionage, punishable by death"