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Chinese cut off from internet
BBC News Online: World: Asia-Pacific Friday, 9 February, 2001, 16:14 GMT
Damage to an undersea cable has cut millions of Chinese off from the internet, and the problem could take weeks to fix.
China Telecom has said that a major cable was cut at about 0800 local time (0000 GMT).
We are sparing no effort to redirect traffic through other channels China Telecom spokeswoman Wang Yang
The company is trying to reroute internet traffic through satellites and other cables, but users who can access overseas sites are reporting slow connections.
The cause of the damage is not yet known.
Neighbours affected
Taiwanese officials said users on the island were also unable to access international sites.
And Hong Kong and Singapore reported reduced speeds.
The damaged cable, which links Shanghai with the west coast of the United States, is just over a year old.
Reports suggest that damage could take anything from a week to three weeks to repair.
'Sparing no effort'
"We are sparing no effort to redirect traffic through other channels, but access speeds could be fairly slow", China Telecom spokeswoman Wang Yang said.
Other telecommunications cables link China to the rest of the world, but the damaged one carried most of the traffic.
Chinese internet users can still access domestic sites, but many Chinese businesses have their main servers overseas.
China Telecom, the state phone giant, plans a multi-billion-dollar stock listing in New York and Hong Kong this year.
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Depending on whether international reports overlap or have been misreported, from http://www.rense.com/general80/cable.htm includes all the references:
one off of Marseille, France
two off of Alexandria, Egypt
one off of Dubai, in the Persian Gulf
one off of Bandar Abbas, Iran in the Persian Gulf
one between Qatar and the UAE, in the Persian Gulf
one in the Suez, Egypt
one near Penang, Malaysia
initially unreported cable cut on 23 January 2008 (Persian Gulf?)
The January 23rd cut was unreported at the time but referenced in the February 4th Bandar Abbas cable cut report specifically as "unreported at the time".
What players/actors in the world would go around cutting non-military international communications pipelines? One particularly noteworthy issue mentioned in the rense article regards the Iranian Oil Borse coming online this month trading in non-US$$... sound familiar? Wasn't that evil Saddam guy guilty of the same dastardly evil-empire stuff by officially trading in non-US$$ just before our invasion?
ixoxi
"BBC News Online: World: Asia-Pacific Friday, 9 February, 2001, 16:14 GMT"
Reading is fun, guys.