Internet and cell phone services resume in Afghanistan
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The cell phone services of Roshan and Etisalat companies came back to life in the late afternoon.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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KABUL - Cell phone and internet services were restored in Afghanistan on Oct 1, local residents said, some 48 hours after diplomatic and industry sources said connectivity was abruptly cut
The cell phone services of Roshan and Etisalat companies, the foreign-owned biggest providers, came back to life in the late afternoon, residents in Kabul and other cities said.
Internet access was restored, according to companies providing the service.
A Taliban official from the information department said there were technical reasons for the outage and that services would be quickly restored.
He did not immediately respond to a request for comment on whether the Taliban had ordered the outage.
The UN had called for connectivity to be reinstated.
In the past, the Taliban has voiced concern about online pornography, and the authorities have cut fibre-optic links to some provinces in recent weeks, with officials citing morality concerns.
The outage on connectivity, which started on Sept 29, follows a series of hardline strictures in 2025, as the Taliban’s conservative leadership, based in the southern city of Kandahar, enforces its views in a tussle against some relatively more open-minded ministers in the capital Kabul.
The outage had caused chaos, with financial remittances, trade with neighbouring countries and the operations of banks paralysed, while many Afghans were left stranded without flights.
Online learning by teenage girls and women, an education lifeline after they were banned by the Taliban from high schools and universities, was also brought to a stop. REUTERS

