 |
|
|
Cable operators announced the
start off of repair works at two of the three broken undersea cables that were
disrupted last week outside the Egyptian city of Alexandria, causing Internet
access problems throughout Middle East and India. The repair works will take at
least a week to be completed, according to Flag Telecom, one of the firms
responsible for the cable.
The cause of the disruption
remains unknown, as cable operators are working on restoring the Internet
connections as soon as possible. According to several reports, India has lost
60% of its bandwidth, and according to Rajesh Chharia, president of the
Internet Service Providers’ Association, things aren’t expected to return to
normal for the next 10 days.
The investigations continue, but
more information is to be expected as soon as all the repairing crews will
reach the broken cables. One of the theories was that a tanker might have
dragged its anchor on the sea bed, but the Egyptian communication ministry said
no ships were reported in the area at the time of the disruption.
Not all cables have been damaged
simultaneously. On January 30, Flag Telecom Europe-Asia cable and SEA-ME-WE-4
cable were disrupted outside the Mediterranean coast of Egypt, and two day
later, on February 1st, the Falcon cable, also owned by Flag Telecom, was
damaged 56 km from Dubai. Consequently one question appears: Could this be a
simple coincidence?
The impact in countries around
the Gulf Region and South Asia had been minimized through redirecting
communication services to new routes, but it is certain that Internet connection
haven’t exactly been the best following the unfortunate incident. Egypt for
example lost 70% of its Internet capacity and will continue to face this
problem within the next week and a half.
The repair teams have been
delayed by bad weather conditions on the Egyptian and Dubai coasts. At the same
time, conspiracy theories have appeared, according to which the ‘perfect timing’
was simply too perfect to be a coincidence, and this whole thing could be an
attempt to deprive some Islamic countries of Internet access. More details on
the exact causes of the disruption are to be expected within the next week.
© 2007 - 2009 - eFluxMedia