Iran: The protests, the blackout and the narrative war

by | Jan 17, 2026 | World

This past week, Iranian protesters were labelled “terrorists” and “saboteurs” by the state. That rhetoric was accompanied by an internet blackout and a surge in violence, with the death toll still unclear. Simultaneously, tensions between the United States and Iran escalated, raising the stakes in what has become one of the most serious political upheavals in the country in years.Contributors:Tohid Asadi – Correspondent, Al Jazeera EnglishNarges Bajoghli – Assistant Professor, Johns Hopkins UniversityRoxane Farmanfarmaian – Lecturer, University Of CambridgeFarzan Sabet – Managing Researcher, Global Governance CentreOn our radarIn the US, the shooting – in public – of a woman two weeks ago by immigration officers has spiralled into a case of outright lying that is remarkable even by the standards of the Trump administration. Ryan Kohls reports on how official accounts, allied media and even AI-generated spokespeople were deployed to defend the shooting.Cory Doctorow: The AI hype machineArtificial intelligence is routinely framed as unstoppable – a technology the world must adapt to, not question. But as companies invest hundreds of billions and the hype accelerates, scrutiny has fallen away. Cory Doctorow on who controls the story around AI and why past tech “revolutions” offer a warning.Featuring:Cory Doctorow – Author and activistPublished On 17 Jan 202617 Jan 2026Click here to share on social mediashare2Share …

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