Starlink satellites approved for use in Israel and Gaza

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A Starlink satellite internet system is set up near the frontline town of Bakhmut amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, Donetsk region, Ukraine March 8, 2023. REUTERS/Lisi Niesner/File Photo

Starlink will support Internet access at an Emirati-run field hospital in Gaza’s southern city Rafah.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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- The Israeli government has approved the use of Mr Elon Musk’s Starlink satellite Internet services in both Israel and parts of the Gaza Strip, the communications minister announced on Feb 14.

Under the deal, Starlink will support Internet access at an Emirati-run field hospital in Gaza’s southern city Rafah, with further expansion in the besieged territory subject to Israeli approval.

Starlink’s network of low Earth orbit satellites

can provide Internet to remote locations, or areas that have had normal communications infrastructure disabled.

“Starlink low-latency high-speed connections will enable video conferencing with other hospitals and real-time remote diagnostics,” Israeli Minister of Communications Shlomo Karhi said in a statement on Feb 14.

Access to reliable, high-speed Internet will “enable potentially life-saving medical consultations via real-time video calling”, UAE Foreign Ministry spokesperson Afra Al Hameli said on social media, welcoming the deal.

Gaza’s hospitals have been overwhelmed by more than four months of war, during which 68,291 people have been wounded according to the Health Ministry in Hamas-run Gaza.

The United Nations estimated last week that there are no fully functioning hospitals left in the territory, with only 13 of 36 working at some capacity.

Mr Musk, who owns Starlink operator SpaceX, had initially proposed extending access to Gaza aid organisations in October after United Nations agencies and non-governmental organisations reported losing contact with their Gaza teams during a communications blackout.

Mr Karhi objected at the time, saying Hamas militants would take advantage of the Internet service.

After Mr Musk visited Israel and toured sites of Hamas’s Oct 7 attack, Mr Karhi said his country had reached an in principle understanding on the use of Starlink.

“The units in the Gaza Strip for the purposes of humanitarian aid” will depend on Israeli security clearance, Mr Karhi said on Feb 14.

Mr Musk wrote on his social media platform X that he “greatly appreciated” Israel’s move, and hoped it would help both Israelis and “innocent civilians in Gaza”. AFP


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