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‘Where’s the gold?’: How the Assads sucked Syria dry

‘Where’s the gold?’: How the Assads sucked Syria dry
From a Bond villain lair in the rugged heights overlooking Damascus, the all-seeing eye of a notorious Syrian military unit gazed down on a city it bled dry. (AFP)
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Updated 03 March 2025

‘Where’s the gold?’: How the Assads sucked Syria dry

‘Where’s the gold?’: How the Assads sucked Syria dry
  • From a Bond villain lair in the rugged heights overlooking Damascus, the all-seeing eye of a notorious Syrian military unit gazed down on a city it bled dry

DAMASCUS:From a Bond villain lair in the rugged heights overlooking Damascus, the all-seeing eye of a notorious Syrian military unit gazed down on a city it bled dry.
Many of the bases of the elite Fourth Division formerly run by toppled president Bashar Assad’s feared younger brother Maher now lie looted.
But papers left strewn behind reveal how the man they called “The Master” and his cronies wallowed in immense wealth while some of their foot soldiers struggled to feed their families and even begged on the streets.
Piles of documents seen by AFP expose a vast economic empire that Maher Assad and his network of profiteers built by pillaging a country already impoverished by nearly 14 years of civil war.
Western governments long accused him and his entourage of turning Syria into a narco state, flooding the Middle East with captagon, an illegal stimulant used both as a party drug in the Gulf and to push migrant workers through punishingly long days in the gruelling heat.
But far beyond that $10-billion trade — whose vast scale was exposed in a 2022 AFP investigation — papers found in its abandoned posts show the Fourth Division had its fingers in many pies in Syria, an all-consuming “mafia” within the pariah state.

+ It expropriated homes and farms
+ Seized food, cars and electronics to sell on
+ Looted copper and metal from bombed-out buildings
+ Collected “fees” at roadblocks and checkpoints
+ Ran protection rackets, making firms pay for escorts of oil tankers, some from areas controlled by jihadists
+ Controlled the tobacco and metal trades

The center of this corrupt web was Maher Assad’s private offices, hidden in an underground labyrinth of tunnels — some big enough to drive a truck through — cut into a mountain above Damascus.
A masked guard took AFP through the tunnels with all the brisk efficiency of a tour guide — the sauna, the bedroom, what appeared to be cells and various “emergency” exit routes.
But at its heart, down a steep flight of 160 stairs, lay a series of vaults with iron-clad doors.
The guard said he had counted nine vaults behind one sealed-off room.
He said safes had been “broken open” by looters who entered the office just hours after the Assad brothers fled Syria on December 8 when Damascus fell to an Islamist-led offensive, ending the family’s five-decade rule.
Maher, 57, did not know of his brother’s plans to flee to Russia and escaped separately, taking a helicopter to the Iraqi border, according to a senior Iraqi security official and two other sources. He then made his way to Russia, they said, apparently via Iran.
The chaos of their fall is apparent in the underground complex. Safes and empty Rolex and Cartier watch boxes still lie scattered about, though it is not known if the vaults were emptied before the looters arrived.
“This is Maher Assad’s main office,” the guard said, “which has two floors above the ground but also tunnels containing locked rooms that can’t be opened.”
In one corridor, a shrink wrap machine — probably used for bundling cash — was abandoned next to a huge safe.

There was never any shortage of bills to wrap.
One document retrieved from the papers that litter the Fourth Division’s Security Bureau farther down the hill show they had ready cash of $80 million, eight million euros and 41 billion Syrian pounds at their fingertips in June. That was a perfectly normal cash float, according to papers going back to 2021.
“This is only a small sample of the wealth that Maher and his associates gathered from their shady business deals,” said Carnegie Middle East Center scholar Kheder Khaddour.
Their real fortune is probably hidden “abroad, likely in Arab and African countries,” he said.
“The Fourth Division was a money-making machine,” Khaddour added, preying on a land where the UN says more than 90 percent of the population was living on a little more than $2 a day.

Western sanctions to squeeze the Assads and their cronies did little to impede Maher and his men.
Theirs was an “independent state” within the state, said Omar Shaaban, a former Fourth Division colonel who has signed a deal with the new Syrian authorities.
“It had all the means... It had everything,” he said.
While the US dollar was officially banned under Assad — with Syrians not even allowed to utter the word — Shaaban said many Fourth Division officers grew “wealthy and had safes full of money.”
“In dollars,” naturally, Shaaban added.
Maher’s cronies lived in sprawling villas, shipping luxury cars abroad while beyond their gates the country was mired in poverty and despair.
Weeks after the Assads’ fall, desperate people were still combing through Maher’s mansion built into a hill in Damascus’ Yaafour neighborhood next to the stables where his daughter rode her prize-winning horses.
“I want the gold. Where’s the gold?” a man asked AFP as he went through its ransacked rooms. But all that was left were old photographs of Maher, his wife and their three children strewn on the floor.

Maher was a shadowy, menacing figure in Assad’s Syria, branded “the butcher” by the opposition. His Fourth Division was the ousted regime’s iron fist, linked to a long list of atrocities.
But while his portrait was hung in all their bases, he was seldom seen in public.
Despite rights groups accusing him of ordering the 2011 massacre of protesters in Daraa — which helped ignite the civil war — and the United Nations linking him to the 2005 assassination of ex-Lebanese prime minister Rafic Hariri, he was “the invisible man,” one person close to the former ruling family told AFP.
“Few people would tell you that they know him,” the source said.
Yet Maher could be generous and good company, according to his sister-in-law Majd Al-Jadaan, a longtime opponent of the regime.
“However, when he gets angry, he completely loses control... This is what makes his personality terrifying,” she told Al-Arabiya TV.
“He knows how to destroy — he knows how to kill and then lie to appear innocent,” Jadaan told French TV early in the civil war, saying he was as ruthless as his father, Hafez.

One other name keeps cropping up alongside Maher’s when people in Damascus curse the crimes of the Fourth Division.
Ghassan Belal was the head of its powerful Security Bureau. Like his boss, he collected luxury cars and lived in a villa in the Yaafour district. Belal has also left Syria, according to security sources.
Inside his spacious offices in the bureau’s headquarters, you can piece together his lavish lifestyle bill by bill from the papers he left, including the cost of running his Cadillac.
Over the summer, Belal shipped two cars, a Lexus and a Mercedes, to Dubai, the $29,000 customs and other expenses charged to a credit card under another name.
A handwritten note showed that despite being sanctioned for human rights abuses, he paid his Netflix subscription using a “friend’s foreign credit card.”
Another list showed that mostly domestic expenses for his properties, including his main villa — which has since also been looted — amounted to $55,000 for just 10 days in August.
That same month, a Fourth Division soldier wrote to Belal begging for help because he was in “a terrible financial situation.” Belal gave him 500,000 Syrian pounds — $33. Another soldier who abandoned his post was caught begging on the street.

While thousands of the papers were burned as the regime fell, many of the classified documents survived the flames and have tales to tell.
Among prominent names mentioned as paying into Fourth Division funds are sanctioned businessmen Khaled Qaddour, Raif Quwatli and the Katerji brothers, who have been accused of generating hundreds of millions of dollars for Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard and the Yemeni Houthis through the sale of Iranian oil to Syria and China.
Quwatli operated checkpoints and crossings where goods were often confiscated or “taxed,” multiple sources said.
Qaddour — who was sanctioned by the United States for bankrolling Maher through captagon, cigarette and mobile phone smuggling — denied having any dealings with him when he tried to have his EU sanctions lifted in 2018.
But the Security Bureau’s revenue list showed he paid $6.5 million into its coffers in 2020 alone.

Khaddour said the Security Bureau handled most of the division’s financial dealings and issued security cards for people it did business with to ease their movements.
A drug lord told Lebanese investigators in 2021 that he held a Fourth Division security card and that the Security Bureau had agreed to protect another dealer’s drug shipment for $2 million, according to a statement seen by AFP.
The US Treasury and several Syrian and Lebanese security figures have also cited Belal and the bureau as key players in the captagon trade.
AFP visited a captagon lab linked to the division in December in a villa in the Dimas area near Lebanon’s border, its rooms full of boxes and barrels of the caffeine, ethanol and paracetamol needed to make the drug.
Locals said they were not allowed to approach the villa, with shepherds banned from the surrounding hills.
A former Fourth Division officer who worked for Belal, and who asked not to be named, said the bureau enjoyed “so much immunity, no one could touch a member without Maher’s approval.”
“It was a mafia, and I knew I was working for a mafia,” he added.

The division’s unbridled greed haunted families for decades as a letter written by Adnan Deeb, a graveyard caretaker from Homs, shows.
His plea for the return of his family’s seized property was found among hundreds of damp and dirty documents at an abandoned checkpoint near Damascus.
When AFP tracked Deeb down, he told how the Fourth Division confiscated his family’s villa, and those of several of their neighbors in the village of Kafraya 10 years ago.
Despite not being allowed near them, Deeb said they still had to pay taxes on the properties, which were used as offices, warehouses and likely a jail.
“The Fourth Division Security Bureau here was a red line that no one dared to come close to,” the son of one of the owners told AFP.
They found hundreds of cars, motorcycles and hundreds of gallons of cooking oil in the properties after the regime fell.
“They left people in hunger while everything was available for them,” he said.
A woman with 25 family members — some living in a tent — repeatedly requested the Fourth Division give her back her home in a document found in another of the villas.

The Fourth Division controlled no part of the Syrian economy more than the metals market, with former colonel Shaaban saying “no one was permitted to move iron” without its approval.
It also had “exclusive” control of copper, he said.
When Assad’s forces took control of a Damascus suburb after a fierce battle with rebels, the Fourth Division swiftly sent its men to pull the copper and iron from destroyed homes, one of its officers recalled.
Fares Shehabi, former head of Syria’s Chamber of Industry said a metal plant managed by one of Maher Assad’s partners monopolized the market, with factories forced to buy exclusively from it.
Many “could no longer operate” under such pressure, Shehabi said.
Maher Assad and his “friends” controlled a big share of Syria’s economy, he said. But the ultimate beneficiary was always his brother Bashar, he argued. “It was one company. The (presidential) palace was always the reference.”
The former Fourth Division officer also insisted a share of profits and seized items always went to the president.

While little seems to be left of Fourth Division today other than its ransacked depots and headquarters, Syria expert Lars Hauch, of Conflict Mediation Solutions (CMS), warned its legacy could yet be highly toxic.
“The Fourth Division was a military actor, a security apparatus, an intelligence entity, an economic force, a political power, and a transnational criminal enterprise,” he said.
“An institution with a decades-long history, enormous financial capacity and close relations with elites doesn’t just vanish,” he added.
“While the top-level leadership fled the country, the committed and mostly Alawite core (from which the Assads come)... retreated to the coastal regions,” Hauch said.
Syria’s new leadership has repeatedly sought to reassure minorities they will not be harmed. But across the country, violence against Alawites has surged.
Hauch said caches of weapons may have been hidden away.
Add to that the division’s war chest of “billions of dollars,” and “you have what you need for a sustained insurgency... if Syria’s transition fails to achieve genuine inclusivity and transitional justice,” the analyst warned.


Use of US bunker-buster bomb looms over Iran conflict

Use of US bunker-buster bomb looms over Iran conflict
Updated 14 sec ago

Use of US bunker-buster bomb looms over Iran conflict

Use of US bunker-buster bomb looms over Iran conflict
  • The GBU-57 is a 30,000-pound warhead capable of penetrating 200 feet underground before exploding
  • It is missing from Israel’s arsenal despite its stated goal of preventing Iran from building a nuclear bomb
WASHINGTON: A powerful American bunker-busting bomb is the only weapon capable of destroying Iran’s deeply buried nuclear facilities, making it President Donald Trump’s weapon of choice if he chooses to militarily back Israel.
The GBU-57, a 30,000-pound (13,607 kg) warhead capable of penetrating 200 feet (61 meters) underground before exploding, is missing from Israel’s arsenal despite its stated goal of preventing Iran from building a nuclear bomb.
In less than a week, the Israeli army has taken out Iranian military commanders and damaged numerous surface installations, raising more questions than answers.
“The regime’s missile stockpiles, launchers, military bases, production facilities, nuclear scientists, military command and control has taken a very severe beating,” said Behnam Ben Taleblu, director of the Iran program at the Washington-based think tank Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), a conservative-leaning group.
“But there are still outsized questions as to how efficacious of a strike Israel had against the beating hearts of Iran’s nuclear program,” Taleblu said.
The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) has reported no damage at Fordo, a uranium enrichment plant south of Tehran. Unlike the Natanz and Isfahan sites in central Iran, Fordo is buried deep underground, beyond the reach of Israeli bombs.
“All eyes will be on Fordo, which is buried under about 300 feet of rock in central Iran,” Taleblu said.
Former US Army lieutenant general and Rand Corporation defense researcher Mark Schwartz insists that “only the United States has the conventional capacity” to destroy such a site.
And by “conventional capacity,” he means the non-nuclear GBU-57 bomb.
The US military says the GBU-57 – also named Massive Ordnance Penetrator – “is designed to penetrate up to 200 feet underground before exploding,” navigating through rock and concrete.
This differs from missiles or bombs that typically detonate their payload near or upon impact.
“To defeat these deeply buried targets, these weapons need to be designed with rather thick casings of steel, hardened steel, to sort of punch through these layers of rock,” said Masao Dahlgren, a fellow working on missile defense for the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS), a Washington-based research center.
The 6.6-meter-long GBU-57 also has a specialized fuse because “you need an explosive that’s not going to immediately explode under that much shock and pressure,” Dahlgren said.
Design for this bomb began in the early 2000s, and an order for 20 units was placed with Boeing in 2009.
The only aircraft capable of deploying the GBU-57 is an American B-2 Bomber, a stealth aircraft.
Some of these bombers were deployed in early May on Diego Garcia, the site of a joint UK-US military base in the Indian Ocean, but were no longer visible by mid-June, according to AFP’s analysis of satellite imagery provided by Planet Labs.
With their long-range capabilities, B-2s departing from the United States “are able to fly all the way to the Middle East to do bombing runs. That’s been done before,” Dahlgren said.
Each B-2 can carry two GBU-57 bombs, and Schwartz said multiple bombs will likely be needed.
“They’re not going to just be one and done,” he said.
Schwartz added that the air superiority Israel has established over Iran reduces the risks faced by the B-2 bombers.
Such a US intervention would come with “a lot of political baggage for America,” Taleblu said, emphasizing that the bunker-buster bomb is not the only way to address Iran’s nuclear program.
Without the GBU-57 bombs, and short of a diplomatic solution, Taleblu said Israelis could attack access to underground complexes like Fordo by “trying to hit entrances, collapse what they can, cut electricity” and take other measures that have already been taken at Natanz.

Syrian farmers pay price of worst drought in decades

Syrian farmers pay price of worst drought in decades
Updated 18 June 2025

Syrian farmers pay price of worst drought in decades

Syrian farmers pay price of worst drought in decades
  • One fruit grower forced to chop down dead pear trees and use them for firewood

DAMASCUS: Syria’s worst drought in decades is taking a devastating toll on the agricultural region of Al-Nashabiyah east of Damascus.
Water reserves are down by more than 60 percent on previous years, levels in dams in March were lower than the past two years, and some areas have lost more than 70 percent of their groundwater reserves.
Farmer Mati Mohammed Nasser expects to lose his whole harvest of wheat, pears, plums and other fruit and vegetables. He usually picks about 200 kg of pears a year from trees he has raised from seedlings, but this year he will chop down the dead trees and use them for firewood.
He paid almost $2,000 to dig a deep well, but the water was only a couple of centimeters deep.
“What are we supposed to do with that?” he said. “We have lost hope. We sold everything we had and invested it into the land.”

Another farmer, Al-Nashabiyah’s deputy mayor Mahmoud Al-Hobeish, is $4,000 in debt. “People are asking for it and they know I cannot pay,” he said.


Israel-Iran air war enters sixth day, Trump calls for Iran’s ‘unconditional surrender’

Israel-Iran air war enters sixth day, Trump calls for Iran’s ‘unconditional surrender’
Updated 18 June 2025

Israel-Iran air war enters sixth day, Trump calls for Iran’s ‘unconditional surrender’

Israel-Iran air war enters sixth day, Trump calls for Iran’s ‘unconditional surrender’
  • US moves additional fighter jets to region
  • Trump says whereabouts of Iranian leader Khamenei are known

JERUSALEM/WASHINGTON/DUBAI: Iran and Israel launched new missile strikes at each other on Wednesday as the air war between the two longtime enemies entered a sixth day despite a call from US President Donald Trump for Iran’s unconditional surrender.
The Israeli military said two barrages of Iranian missiles were launched toward Israel in the first two hours of Wednesday morning. Explosions were heard over Tel Aviv.
Israel told residents in the area of Tehran to evacuate so its air force could strike Iranian military installations. Iranian news websites said explosions were heard in Tehran and the city of Karaj west of the capital.
Trump warned on social media on Tuesday that US patience was wearing thin. While he said there was no intention to kill Iran’s leader “for now,” his comments suggested a more aggressive stance toward Iran as he weighs whether to deepen US involvement.
“We know exactly where the so-called ‘Supreme Leader’ is hiding,” he wrote on Truth Social, referring to Iran’s Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. “We are not going to take him out , at least not for now ... Our patience is wearing thin.”
Three minutes later Trump posted, “UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER!“
A White House official said Trump spoke to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu by phone on Tuesday.
Trump’s sometimes contradictory and cryptic messaging about the conflict between close US ally Israel and longtime foe Iran has deepened the uncertainty surrounding the crisis. His public comments have ranged from military threats to diplomatic overtures, not uncommon for a president known for an often erratic approach to foreign policy.
Britain’s leader Keir Starmer, speaking at the Group of Seven nations summit in Canada that Trump left early, said there was no indication the US was about to enter the conflict.
Trump met for 90 minutes with his National Security Council on Tuesday afternoon to discuss the conflict, a White House official said. Details were not immediately available.
The US is deploying more fighter aircraft to the Middle East and extending the deployment of other warplanes, three US officials told Reuters. The US has so far only taken defensive actions in the current conflict with Iran, including helping to shoot down missiles fired toward Israel.

Regional influence weakens
Khamenei’s main military and security advisers have been killed by Israeli strikes, hollowing out his inner circle and raising the risk of strategic errors, according to five people familiar with his decision-making process.
With Iranian leaders suffering their most dangerous security breach since the 1979 Islamic Revolution, the country’s cybersecurity command banned officials from using communications devices and mobile phones, Fars news agency reported.
Israel launched a “massive cyber war” against Iran’s digital infrastructure, Iranian media reported.
Ever since Iran-backed Hamas attacked Israel on October 7, 2023, and triggered the Gaza war, Khamenei’s regional influence has waned as Israel has pounded Iran’s proxies — from Hamas in Gaza to Hezbollah in Lebanon, the Houthis in Yemen and militias in Iraq. Iran’s close ally, Syria’s autocratic president Bashar Assad, has been ousted.
Israel launched its air war, its largest ever on Iran, on Friday after saying it had concluded the Islamic Republic was on the verge of developing a nuclear weapon.
Iran denies seeking nuclear weapons and has pointed to its right to nuclear technology for peaceful purposes, including enrichment, as a party to the international Non-Proliferation Treaty.
Israel, which is not a party to the NPT, is the only country in the Middle East believed to have nuclear weapons. Israel does not deny or confirm that.
Netanyahu has stressed that he will not back down until Iran’s nuclear development is disabled, while Trump says the Israeli assault could end if Iran agrees to strict curbs on enrichment.
Before Israel’s attack began, the 35-nation board of governors of the UN nuclear watchdog, the International Atomic Energy Agency, declared Iran in breach of its non-proliferation obligations for the first time in almost 20 years.
The IAEA said on Tuesday an Israeli strike directly hit the underground enrichment halls at the Natanz facility.
Israel says it now has control of Iranian airspace and intends to escalate the campaign in coming days.
But Israel will struggle to deal a knock-out blow to deeply buried nuclear sites like Fordow, which is dug beneath a mountain, without the US joining the attack.
Iranian officials have reported 224 deaths, mostly civilians, while Israel said 24 civilians had been killed. Residents of both countries have been evacuated or fled.
Global oil markets are on high alert following strikes on sites including the world’s biggest gas field, South Pars, shared by Iran and Qatar.


Iran celebrates state TV presenter after Israeli attack

Iran celebrates state TV presenter after Israeli attack
Updated 18 June 2025

Iran celebrates state TV presenter after Israeli attack

Iran celebrates state TV presenter after Israeli attack
  • “This dust you see in the studio...” she began, her finger raised, before being interrupted by the sound of yet another blast

TEHRAN: Facing the camera with a defiant gaze, her index finger raised in the air, Iranian TV presenter Sahar Emami became an icon in her country after an Israeli attack on the state broadcaster.
“What you can see is the flagrant aggression of the Zionist regime against the Islamic Republic of Iran and the Iranian broadcaster,” she said on air Monday as several explosions were heard in the background.
“What you just heard was the sound of an aggressor against the motherland, the sound of an aggressor against truth,” added Emami, who is known for her impactful interviews with government officials.
“This dust you see in the studio...” she began, her finger raised, before being interrupted by the sound of yet another blast.
The journalist, clad in a black chador, rushed out of her seat and disappeared from view.
The destruction in the studio, which quickly filled with smoke and dust, was broadcast live before the transmission was cut.
Emami, who Iranian media say is in her 40s, is a familiar face to viewers in the Islamic republic after some 15 years on air with state television.
She resumed the broadcast just a few minutes after the attack, as if nothing unusual had happened.
The broadcaster’s headquarters in the capital Tehran with its recognizable glass exterior was badly damaged in the fire that broke out as a result of the Israeli attack.
Official media shared images of charred offices and studios no longer usable.
Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi on Tuesday denounced Israel’s “cowardice” in striking the state television building, in an attack that the broadcaster said killed three people.
“The attack against the Iranian broadcaster demonstrates the Israelis’ desperation,” Araghchi said.
Conservative newspaper Farhikhtegan said on its front page on Tuesday: “Female journalist’s resistance until the last moment sends a clear message.”
Ultraconservative publication Kayhan said: “The courage of the lioness presenter surprised friends and foes.”
The government put up a banner in Tehran’s central Vali-Asr Square honoring Emami, showing her image paired with a verse from the Persian poet Ferdowsi that celebrated the courage of women “on the battlefield.”
The state broadcaster has aired the clip of Emami during Monday’s attacks multiple times since then, celebrating its presenter.
State TV meanwhile mocked a reporter for the London-based Iran International TV, which is critical of the Iranian government.
In footage from a live broadcast, the reporter in Israel is seen rushing to a bomb shelter after warnings of incoming missiles from Iran.
 

 


Iran asks its people to delete WhatsApp from their devices

Iran asks its people to delete WhatsApp from their devices
Updated 18 June 2025

Iran asks its people to delete WhatsApp from their devices

Iran asks its people to delete WhatsApp from their devices
  • Iran has blocked access to various social media platforms over the years but many people in the country use proxies and virtual private networks, or VPNs, to access them

Iranian state television on Tuesday afternoon urged the country’s public to remove the messaging platform WhatsApp from their smartphones, alleging the app — without offering specific evidence — gathered user information to send to Israel.
In a statement, WhatsApp said it was “concerned these false reports will be an excuse for our services to be blocked at a time when people need them the most.” WhatsApp uses end-to-end encryption, meaning a service provider in the middle can’t read a message.
“We do not track your precise location, we don’t keep logs of who everyone is messaging and we do not track the personal messages people are sending one another,” it added. “We do not provide bulk information to any government.”
End-to-end encryption means that messages are scrambled so that only the sender and recipient can see them. If anyone else intercepts the message, all they will see is a garble that can’t be unscrambled without the key.
Gregory Falco, an assistant professor of engineering at Cornell University and cybersecurity expert, said it’s been demonstrated that it’s possible to understand metadata about WhatsApp that does not get encrypted.
“So you can understand things about how people are using the app and that’s been a consistent issue where people have not been interested in engaging with WhatsApp for that (reason),” he said.
Another issue is data sovereignty, Falco added, where data centers hosting WhatsApp data from a certain country are not necessarily located in that country. It’s more than feasible, for instance, that WhatsApp’s data from Iran is not hosted in Iran.
“Countries need to house their data in-country and process the data in-country with their own algorithms. Because it’s really hard increasingly to trust the global network of data infrastructure,” he said.
WhatsApp is owned by Meta Platforms, the parent company of Facebook and Instagram.
Iran has blocked access to various social media platforms over the years but many people in the country use proxies and virtual private networks, or VPNs, to access them. It banned WhatsApp and Google Play in 2022 during mass protests against the government over the death of a woman held by the country’s morality police. That ban was lifted late last year.
WhatsApp had been one of Iran’s most popular messaging apps besides Instagram and Telegram.