Iran eased some restrictions on its people and for the first time in days allowed them to make phone calls abroad via their mobile phones on Tuesday. It did not ease restrictions on the internet or allow texting services to be restored as the toll from days of bloody protests against the state rose to at least 646 people killed.
Although Iranians were able to call abroad, people outside the country could not call them, several people in the capital told The Associated Press.
The witnesses, who spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisal, said SMS text messaging still was down and internet users inside Iran could not access anything abroad, although there were local connections to government-approved websites.
It was unclear if restrictions would ease further after authorities cut off all communications inside the country and to the outside world late Thursday.
Here is the latest.
German Chancellor believes Iranian government is in its ‘final days and weeks'
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz said he believes the Iranian government is in its ''final days and weeks,'' as he renewed a call for Iranian authorities to end violence against demonstrators immediately.
''If a regime can only keep itself in power by force, then it's effectively at the end,'' Merz said Tuesday during a visit to Bengaluru, India. ''I believe we are now seeing the final days and weeks of this regime. In any case, it has no legitimacy through elections in the population. The population is now rising up against this regime.''