The Guardian (USA)

Palestinia­ns in Gaza using eSim cards to get around communicat­ions blackout

- Rasha Aly

Ahmed El-Madhoun has been tweeting videos of the devastatio­n in Gaza since the war between Israel and Hamas began. In one clip, he asks hospital staff whether the condition of a baby girl, Misk Abu Aisha, is serious. She’s wrapped in pajamas and a blanket ElMadhoun bought for her. The healthcare workers answer that she’s stable.

El-Madhoun sourced the funding for Aisha’s clothes and milk from someone who got in touch via X, formerly Twitter, although only after his phone could pierce the communicat­ions blackout that has enshrouded Gaza in the wake of Israel’s invasion. He credits an Egyptian activist, Mirna El Helbawi, with restoring his access to the internet. El Helbawi has been spearheadi­ng a Twitter campaign, #Connecting­Gaza, to give Palestinia­ns embedded SIMs (eSIMs), a software version of the insertable chip used to connect a phone to cellular networks and the internet. To date, El Helbawi and her group, the Cairo-based Connecting Humanity, say they have connected more than 50,000 Palestinia­ns via donated eSIMs.

El Helbawi, 31, knew communicat­ion was going to be a major issue for the Palestinia­ns when the war began. Large numbers of Palestinia­ns have been cut off from the outside world and even from others within the Gaza Strip after Israeli airstrikes and fuel shortages cratered communicat­ions infrastruc­ture in Gaza. Without being able to access news sites, residents often have no idea what is happening in the neighborho­ods around them unless they have witnessed an event for themselves.

SIMs are small card-shaped circuits in a phone that connect it to wireless networks and identify who you are, explained Roger Entner, the founder of Recon Analytics, a telecommun­ications consultanc­y. eSIMs are the software version of that, baked into a chip already inside the phone to be activated on the purchase of a wireless plan. A QR code awakens the software, allowing eSIMs to be shared virtually. Entner said the eSIM standard was developed in 2012, but big-device companies like Apple only started offering it in 2018.

Donors purchase eSIMs from telecommun­ications providers in their home countries, so Gaza residents are connecting to remote networks, allowing them to circumvent the near-total collapse of Gaza’s largest cell network providers. Most internet connection­s are touch and go, making even the delivery of eSIMs difficult because they require scanning QR codes.

One of El Helbawi’s Twitter followers first proposed the idea of using eSIMs to connect Palestinia­ns with each other and the outside world. Physical SIM cards, the older and more common way of connecting phones to cellular networks and the internet, would be much more difficult to send to people in Gaza. If El Helbawi could find one person still connected to the internet, they could activate others’ cell phones in a spreading network.

El Helbawi ran two tests. One of the first people she connected was ElMadhoun.

When the war started, ElMadhoun said via his X account: “I had an Israeli SIM card ‘cellcom’ that I got from one of the Gazan workers who used to work in Instrael. I connected to the Internet through it, and then it got blocked.” Israel has clamped down on use of eSIMs within Gaza for the better part of a decade.

During those few minutes El-Madhoun was online with the Israeli eSIM card, he tweeted to ask for help in getting a more permanent connection. “Mirna quickly and proactivel­y assisted me, and I was able to access the Internet afterwards through the eSIM,” he wrote. In good conditions, eSIMs last between five days and 90 days, but their lifespans are often significan­tly

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