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Solve : As More Undersea Cables are Gashed...?

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Disrupting Internet Access to Middle East, India, Sri Lanka and Pakistan - Investigation Reveals Cuts Not Accidentally Caused by Anchors - Cause “Unknown”

As a third and then fourth SUBMARINE Internet cable are cut, further disrupting power to India, Sri Lanka, Pakistan, Egypt, Iran, Qatar, and other Middle East countries, officials admit that the cuts to the undersea cables have not been caused by poorly dropped anchors, but deny that the cable cuts are the result of malicious activity.

According to a statement made by Egypt’s Ministry of Communication, “A marine transport committee investigated the traffic of ships in the area, 12 hours before and after the malfunction, where the cables are located to figure out the possibility of being cut by a passing vessel and found out there were no passing ships at that time,” adding that where the cables were cut “was in a restricted area so ships would not have been allowed there to begin with.”

“The area is also marked on maps as a no-go zone and it is therefore ruled out that the damage to the cables was caused by ships,” the statement said.

Still, officials are downplaying the suggestion that the DISRUPTIONS may be intentional, or related to terrorism, and is attempting to quash conspiracy theories.

A spokesperson for FLAG (Fibre-optic Link Around the Globe) Telecom, which owns two of the cables, said, of the suggestion that the cable damage was intentional, “I think it is doubtful,” although they did admit that the fact that all four cables were cut within such a close time PERIOD did seem like a bit of a coincidence.That's the most contradictions i've seen in a short ARTICLE since the original review of Vista.I have a strong suspicion, that someone was really unhappy with Indian tech support...Update....

HERE

Plot Thickens as FIFTH Undersea Internet Cable Outage Reported and Iran Taken Offline

A few days ago we reported that a a third and fourth undersea telecom Internet cable had been cut, following the initial disruptions caused by damage to two underwater cables that had been blamed on anchors dropping on the cables, plunging millions of people in India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, and the Middle East, into Internet darkness.

Now, the plot thickens as a fifth undersea Internet cable outage is reported, and Iran is taken offline.

According to Khaleej Times, an estimated “1.7 million Internet users in the UAE have been affected by the recent undersea cable damage.”

Total users affected so far by the outages exceeds 80million.

Reports are that Iran has been taken down to zero Internet access, and a review of the data available at the Internet Traffic Report site substantiates this:


Internet Traffic to/from Iran at the time of the writing of this article is at a standstill:

Said Mahesh Jaishankar, executive director for du, a UAE telecom provider, “The submarine cable cuts in FLAG Europe-Asia cable 8.3km away from Alexandria, Egypt and SeaMeWe-4 affected at least 60 million users in India, 12 million in Pakistan, six million in Egypt and 4.7 million in Saudi Arabia.”

With the fact of not only a fifth cable being damaged, but the fact that these cables are many miles apart, theories abound.

One thing is sure, however: at this point calling it a coincidence - unlike whatever is actually happening to these cables - just doesn’t cut it.


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