Despite the internet shutdown, angry protesters in Iran are taking to the streets to protest against the government.
According to the French news agency AFP, the protest movement has entered its fifth week after the death of 22-year-old Mahsa Amini in police custody.
Mahsa Amini was detained for not wearing the hijab properly. He died on September 16 after three days in a coma, sparking nationwide protests.

Protesting women gathered at Shariati Technical and Vocational College in Tehran.
They chanted slogans like 'Guns, tanks and fire are not allowed: give up Mullah power'. The video of this protest has gone viral on the internet.
According to a social media channel that monitors protests and police violations, shopkeepers went on strike in Mahsa Amini's hometown of Saqq and Mahabad.
On Saturday, a nationwide protest was called by human rights activists.
In response to the protests, one of Iran's leading organizations, the Islamic Propaganda, urged the public to "express their anger against evil-doers and troublemakers."
These women-led protests have also been appreciated by the US President.
At least 108 people have been killed in protests in Iran so far, and at least 93 in clashes in Sistan-Baluchistan alone, an Oslo-based human rights group said.
The supreme leader of Iran has accused of "spreading chaos on the enemies of the country, including the US and Israel".
Iranian security forces are arresting artists, dissidents, journalists and sportsmen on a large scale.
Iranian filmmaker Mani Haghighi said authorities have barred him from attending a film festival in London for supporting the protests.