Submarine Cable Damage In Red Sea Disrupts Internet Traffic

Submarine cables in the Red Sea have sustained significant damages, leading to network interruptions in the Middle East region.By Samra Ahmed, Forbes Middle East
March 4, 2024

Damage to submarine cables in the Red Sea is disrupting telecommunications networks and forcing providers to reroute internet traffic between Asia, Europe and the Middle East.

Internet disruption

Out of the more than 15 submarine cables in the Red Sea, four have been severed las week, affecting 25% of the traffic flow between Asia, Europe, and the Middle East, HGC Global Communications said Monday.

The affected cables are Seacom, TGN, AAE-1, and EIG.

HGC did not mention how exactly these cables had been damaged. However, it noted ‘significant' disruption to communications networks in the Middle East, the Hong Kong-based telecoms company said last week, announcing the damage.

HGC estimates about 15% of Asia traffic goes westbound, while 80% of the traffic passes through submarine cables in the Red Sea.

Seacom experienced a subsea cable system outage last week, which lasted more than 48 hours. The disruption impacted connectivity between Africa and Europe, local media reported.

Maintenance

Yemen's Ministry of Telecommunications and Information Technology, in a statement on February 28, emphasized its commitment to safeguarding all telecom submarine cables and services, pledging readiness to facilitate maintenance and repairs in collaboration with the Government of Yemen and licensed parties under Sana'a's Maritime Affairs Authority.

“(We) are ready to assist requests for permits and identify ships with the Yemeni Navy, and we confirm this is out of concern for their safety,” said Telecommunications Minister Misfer Al-Numair on X Monday.

Rerouting traffic

HGC is now rerouting affected traffic to mitigate disruptions, ensuring that its “clients' communications do not pass through the damaged cables during this period.”

The company said Monday it had received inquiries from Middle East and North African (MENA) carriers for contingency rerouting options from Hong Kong networks to Westbound.

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