Smuggled Starlink dishes allow Sudanese to connect despite internet blackouts

Science & Tech 17:46 04.04.2024

 On a street corner in the Sudanese town of Tamboul, dozens of people tap feverishly on their phones, calling loved ones and moving money through online apps, Ednews reports via ArabWeekly.

At the centre of their huddle is a bright white dish that connects to the internet via Starlink, the satellite system owned by Elon Musk’s SpaceX rocket company.

Starlink has become a lifeline for some in a country where the internet has gone down regularly since war erupted last April between Sudan’s army and the RSF paramilitary force.

But the system, which can bring connectivity where there is no land-based network, is not officially available in Sudan.

Instead, the kits have made their way into the country “illegally via Libya, South Sudan and Eritrea”, one device reseller told AFP on condition of anonymity.

The cost for dishes and subscriptions can run into the hundreds of dollars, well out of reach for most Sudanese.

The fees are paid by Sudanese overseas or entrepreneurs like Mohamed Bellah, who runs an internet cafe in a village some 120 kilometres south of Khartoum.

“You can make your money back in three days,” he told AFP, saying the investment was worth every penny.

The conflict between the army of Abdel Fattah al-Burhan and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) of his former deputy Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo has displaced millions and killed many thousands.

The banking system has collapsed and millions can now access money only via the Bank of Khartoum’s app, Bankak.

Officials have not offered an explanation for the blackouts.

Now people like Issam Ahmed, huddled around the dish in Tamboul, some 140 kilometres southeast of Khartoum, are reliant on Starlink.

He has been anxiously waiting for family news and financial support from his son, who works in Saudi Arabia.

Starlink, which is available in more than 70 countries, allows users on high-cost tariffs to take their dishes with them across national boundaries.

Musk made a big play of deploying the system in war-torn Ukraine and during protests in Iran in 2022.

But he has made no such gesture in Sudan and none of the tariffs advertised on Starlink’s website would allow the kind of usage seen there.

The Sudanese government, which is loyal to the army, banned Starlink devices in December.

But the army later backtracked on the ban, announcing in late February it would donate some Starlink dishes to residents in Omdurman, part of greater Khartoum.

The vast region of Darfur in Sudan’s west, home to around a quarter of its 48 million people, has been particularly hit by the war-time blackout.

Huge areas have been without any connection for nearly a year and use of the dishes has spread rapidly in a region largely controlled by the RSF.

“Without (Starlink) we could have never figured out how to receive money,” Mohammed Beshara told AFP via text message from the Otash camp in South Darfur.

But for Beshara and thousands like him, it takes money to get money.

He pays roughly $3 an hour for the connection and currency dealers take commissions for every Bankak transaction.

For desperate Tamboul residents like 43-year-old Arij Ahmed, paying commissions is a necessary sacrifice.

She walks five kilometres with her 12-year-old son to the Starlink dish “every week, when my husband in Qatar gets his pay cheque and he sends us a transfer”, she told AFP.

And every week, she hopes to get enough money to survive until her next connection.

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