Related: Earthquakes jolt South
China Sea
BEIJING, Dec. 28 -- Access to overseas
websites from the Chinese mainland slowed to a crawl yesterday as a powerful
earthquake off the Taiwan coast knocked off international undersea fibre-optic
cables on Tuesday, affecting communications around Asia.
It is believed to be the most serious disruption
since 2001, when a submarine cable connecting the mainland with the United
States was cut off more than four times, mostly by fishing boats.
It is not clear when normal service will be restored.
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Residents stay at an open area in Xiamen, a coastal
city of southeast China's Fujian Province, Dec. 26, 2006. Two earthquakes
-- the first measuring 7.2 on the Richter scale at 8:26 p.m. and the
second measuring 6.7 at 8:34 p.m. -- hit the South China Sea on Tuesday.
Strong quakes were felt in Guangdong and Fujian provinces as well as Hong
Kong and Macao, but no damage or casualty reports are available.(Xinhua
Photo) Photo Gallery
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China Telecom Corp, the mainland's largest fixed-line
carrier, said six undersea cables were cut off 15 kilometres from the southern
coast of Taiwan, causing severe Internet congestion on the mainland.
International voice calls were also affected.
A survey by Internet portal Sina.com yesterday showed
that 97 per cent of Internet users on the mainland had difficulty accessing
overseas websites, and 57 per cent said their lives and work were affected. But
access to mainland websites remains normal.
Such disruptions underscore the increasing importance
of back-up systems.
"We have to use alternative cables as well as
satellite communications," said Xu Yongming, an official in charge of China
Netcom's international network.
He added that mainland operators are working with
their overseas counterparts to repair the damaged cables.
"Aftershocks off Taiwan make it even harder to repair
the damaged cables," said a China Telecom spokeswoman.
The disruption affected telecommunications services
in Hong Kong, Taiwan, South Korea, Singapore and Japan and paralyzed some
banking services.
In Hong Kong, Internet connection, long distance
calls and online financial transactions were affected, but the stock exchange
said operations were normal.
Internet connection speed was much slower than
normal. Some overseas websites in the United States, Britain and Taiwan could
not be accessed. Emails and online chatting were barely functioning.
Internet Society of Hong Kong Chairman Charles Mok
said overseas users connecting to Hong Kong and the mainland's websites were
also affected.
Hong Kong Computer Emergency Response Team
Coordination Centre Manager Roy Ko said it might take months to repair the
cables.
Taiwan's Chunghwa Telecom may be hardest hit. It said
repairing the cable could take three weeks, adding that almost no calls could be
made to Southeast Asia.
Chunghwa said voice calls to the mainland, Japan and
the United States were down 10, 11 and 40 per cent of normal capacity.
The Chinese mainland is less affected as operators
here have alternative lines away from quake-hit Taiwan, said Xu with Netcom.
He said it may take a shorter time to restore
communications on the mainland but limited capacity could slow down access to
overseas websites, especially during peak hours.
Current Internet networks on the mainland already
face a bottleneck in capacity given the growing popularity of broadband Internet
access as well as data-heavy services such as video downloads.
At the end of November, the mainland had 51 million
broadband Internet subscribers, an increase of 13.7 million compared to the end
of last year, according to the Ministry of Information Industry.
China Telecom Executive Vice-President Leng Rongquan
last week said the current submarine cable network linking China and the US will
not be able to meet demand after 2008.
Six operators from China, South Korea and the United
States including Verizon Business last week signed a deal to build a submarine
cable linking China and the United States at an investment of US$500 million.
The new cable will have more than 60 times the
overall capacity of the existing one linking the United States and China.
(Source: China Daily)
Earthquakes in sea areas near Taiwan
kill 2
BEIJING, Dec. 27 (Xinhua) -- Earthquakes that occurred
from late Tuesday to early Wednesday in the coastal water near Pingtung County,
southern Taiwan, have killed two and injured 42.
The Pingtung County was the worst hit area by the
earthquakes, followed by Kaohsiung County and Kaohsiung City.
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