Damage to submarine cables in the Red Sea is disrupting telecommunications networks and forcing providers to reroute as much as a quarter of traffic between Asia, Europe and the Middle East, including internet traffic.
Cables belonging to four major telecoms networks have been “cut” causing “significant” disruption to communications networks in the Middle East, according to Hong Kong telecoms company HGC Global Communications.
HGC estimates that 25% of traffic between Asia and Europe as well the Middle East has been impacted, it said in a statement Monday.
The company said it is rerouting traffic to minimize disruption for customers and also “extending assistance to affected businesses.”
HGC did not say how the cables had been damaged or who was responsible.
South Africa-based Seacom, which owns one of the cable systems affected, told CNN that repairs wouldn’t begin for at least another month, partly because of the length of time it takes to secure permits to operate in the area.
Underwater cables are the invisible force driving the internet, with many funded in recent years by internet giants such as Google, Microsoft, Amazon and Facebook parent Meta. Damage to these subsea networks can cause widespread internet outages, as happened following the Taiwan earthquake in 2006.
The destruction of cables in the Red Sea comes weeks after the official Yemeni government warned of the possibility that Houthi rebels would target the cables. The Iranian-backed militants have already disrupted global supply chains by attacking commercial vessels in the crucial waterway.
fortune.com/2024/03/04/internet-cables-cut-red-sea/
Red Sea undersea cables 'cut' disrupting global internet traffict.co/35Bp4fhFtz
— Middle East Eye (@MiddleEastEye) March 4, 2024
MUST READ: "While HGC did not say who was responsible for the damage, the report comes after the Yemeni government warned that the Houthis could target the cables"
From @MiddleEastEye t.co/Ywg4zC3haU
— Palestine Deep Dive (@PDeepdive) March 4, 2024
Most internet traffic between Europe and East Asia runs through undersea cables that funnel into the narrow strait at the southern end of the Red Sea. That chokepoint has long posed risks for telecom infrastructure because of its busy ship traffic, which raises the likelihood… pic.twitter.com/TFNlgsez5h
— Geopolitics & Empire (@Geopolitics_Emp) March 2, 2024
h/t Digital mix guy Spock
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