Search Site

TSMC’s April revenue up 60%

It capitalized on huge wave of demand for chips used in AI hardware.

Etihad reports record Q1 profit

Total revenue increased by $269 million in the same period.

Aramco Q1 profit down 14.5%

Despite lower profit, it will pay $31bn in dividends to Saudi government.

IHC Q1 net profit $2.17bn

The company launches Share Buyback Programme

Amazon triples quarterly profit

The company's cloud, ads, and retail businesses thrive.

Tajikistan plans to link up with China’s telecom network

Internet activity is also tightly controlled by the state in Tajikistan. (AFP)
  • Tajikistan has one of the slowest internet services in the world despite improvements in recent years, with all traffic going through a center controlled by a government monopoly
  • The project will be carried out alongside the construction of a highway linking Dushanbe, the country's capital in the west, with a town on its border with China

Dushanbe, Tajikistan – Tajikistan announced plans Friday to link with China’s telecommunications network in order to improve the mountainous, landlocked country’s internet access, as Beijing’s influence in Central Asia grows.

Tajikistan has one of the slowest internet services in the world despite improvements in recent years, with all traffic going through a center controlled by a government monopoly.

The project will be carried out alongside the construction of a highway linking Dushanbe, the country’s capital in the west, with a town on its border with China, according to state news agency Khovar.

Khovar said the project will create “additional high-speed international fiberoptic communication lines” to connect to global internet networks and “eliminate the communication isolation of the republic.”

Only 22 percent of Tajiks used the internet in 2017 as prices for the service were too high for the poorest population of the former Soviet Union’s Central Asian republics, according to the most recent World Bank figures.

Internet activity is also tightly controlled by the state, with Reporters Without Borders saying the main news sites and social media platforms are almost permanently blocked.

China also has a vast online censorship apparatus that blocks Western news and social media platforms.