Two ships have been impounded in Dubai after satellite images indicated that
they may have been responsible for the
damage
to undersea cables which left large parts of the Middle East without proper
internet access.
Reliance Globalcom, which owns the cables, used satellite photos to identify
the MV Hounslow and MV Ann as being the most likely culprits
and stopped the ships in Dubai.
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One of the ships has now been released after the Korean owners agreed to pay
compensation. But two sailors on the second Iraqi-owned ship may now face trial.
"The matter has been brought to the notice of appropriate authorities which
are taking necessary action," a Reliance Globalcom official told The
Hindu.
The loss of the cables caused internet access in some countries to slow by as
much as 80 per cent, and harmed performance at call centres in Egypt to the
extent that the state telecoms company asked ordinary users
to
stay offline.
Egyptian authorities said initially that ships were
not
responsible for the outages which led the United Nations to investigate
whether the cable had been
damaged
by saboteurs.
The matter has been brought to the notice of appropriate authorities
Reliance Globalcom
However, it is claimed that the two ships were travelling in a forbidden area
and dropped their anchors during a storm, where they snagged on and then broke
several vital cables.
A press statement issued by local service provider Etisalat quoted Omar Bin
Kalban, managing director of E-marine PJSC, as saying: "This was an extremely
difficult period for the region's telecommunications industry.
"The cuts were extremely serious as many of the Gulf countries rely on
submarine cables to provide access to international markets and internet
content. Accordingly, telephone and internet services were seriously degraded."
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