Kazakhstan shut down the internet as violent fuel-price protests rock the country and force out the government

  • Kazakhstan is being rocked by violent protests over rising fuel prices.

  • The country's internet was blacked out, according to internet-monitoring body Netblocks.

  • The government resigned Wednesday, deepening the chaos.

Kazakhstan's entire internet has been blacked out amid massive protests over fuel prices.

Netblocks, a website that monitors internet around the world, said Wednesday that Kazakhstan was "in the midst of a nation-scale internet blackout."

Many of the country's news websites were not accessible on Wednesday, The Associated Press reported.

Protests started in one of the country's provinces on Sunday and have since spread nationwide, resulting in a government resignation, as Insider's Bill Bostock reported.

Kassym-Jomart Tokayev, Kazakhstan's president, accepted the government's resignation on Wednesday, Reuters reported.

Videos showed protesters throwing projectiles at armoured vehicles and forcing them to turn back.

The protests were sparked after the government removed a price cap on liquefied petroleum gas, resulting in a price surge. The president reversed the price rise on Wednesday, according to Reuters.

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