Local Internet access in Tripoli was strangely restored for a while  late Saturday local time after months of disruption, according to  reports on Twitter,  as rebels closed in on the capital city of Libya.  But it was down again for most of the city by Sunday.
 
 At one point a majority of the country's international routes were also  down, reported Renesys,  a firm that studies Internet traffic flows.
 
 Internet through DSL (digital subscriber line) was momentarily unblocked  for Tripoli in the late hours of Saturday local time,  a resident Ahmed  Shreef said in an e-mail on Sunday. But the Internet was once again  blocked by Sunday, he said.
 
 Shreef was unwilling to discuss how he had access to Google's Gmail  after the Internet service was blocked again. "I cannot discuss that,"  he said.
 
 A number of Libyan groups from within Tripoli and outside the country  reported through messages on Twitter that the Internet had been restored  late Saturday.  Some messages on Twitter advised caution.  "Not sure  what the catch is," said Shreef, for example, in a Twitter message.
 
 Something very strange was going on with Tripoli residents' Internet access, Renesys said in a blog post on Sunday.  "Service was restored suddenly in Tripoli, flickered on and  off for a couple of hours, and then died, with the majority of the  country's international BGP (Border Gateway Protocol) routes withdrawn  from service for good measure," it said.
 
 The routes are back in Tripoli, but the DSL service isn't, Renesys said.  Local Internet service appears to be down again, the status quo ante  for the last five months, it added.
 
 DSL was blocked in Tripoli in the middle of February, though it was  unblocked in some selective government buildings for some government  officials during March and April, according to Shreef.  
 
 "Local servers are accessible and the .ly websites can be accessed. This has been so since February," Shreef said.
 
 Renesys speculated that the "brief Tripoli Internet flicker" was the  sign of  a conflict within the local phone company itself, with someone  struggling to reactivate service at the neighborhood level, only to have  it switched off again at the national level. The overnight routing  failure could also be just another in a sequence of probably  power-related outages for Libyan Telecom and Technology's outlier  networks, it added.
