Gaza

Palestinians are using donated eSIM cards to stay in touch with the outside world

Palestinians have faced numerous internet and phone blackouts throughout the months-long war.

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(Photo by AFP) (Photo by -/AFP via Getty Images)

As the Gaza Strip enters its second week of a near-total phone and internet blackout, some people in the war-torn enclave are using a lesser-known technology โ€” eSIM cards โ€” as a last grasp at contact with the outside world.

Most newer smartphones let users load an electronic SIM card rather than a physical one, both of which grant users access to wireless networks. Some Palestinians have resorted to using donated phone plans registered in other countries to catch a roaming signal from Israeli or Egyptian cell towers to reach people outside the region.

โ€œSome of the Israeli networks reach inside Gaza,โ€ Suhail Nassar, a photographer in Gaza who uses Instagram to document the war, told NBC via WhatsApp. โ€œWe donโ€™t have any local network available right now. So either we buy the eSIMs or people around the world collect eSIMs for us and send them through WhatsApp, through emails,โ€ he said.

The eSIMs are far from a perfect solution: Older phones canโ€™t use them and an existing connection is needed to download new ones. Some of the eSIMs donโ€™t work properly. And it can be hard to catch a signal from a cell tower across a border, Nassar said, which often requires climbing somewhere high, like the exposed roof of a building.

Read the full story on NBCNews.com here.

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