Related: Earthquakes in Taiwan
disrupt regional telecommunications
BEIJING, Dec. 29 -- Chinese mainland telephone
operators have partially restored telecommunications disrupted by the severing
of undersea cables off the Taiwan coast.
An earthquake on Tuesday night cut several submarine
cables near the southern coast off Taiwan, shutting down or slowing the Chinese
mainland's access to overseas websites and international calls.
China Telecom Corp said it had "basically" restored
all the international calls and services provided to its big corporate customers
by 10 pm yesterday.
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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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Nearly 15 per cent of Internet-related circuits
affected by the earthquake have been restored.
China Netcom said two boats had started repairing the
damaged lines and three others were on their way to help out. The firm expects
international telecommunications to be restored "within days."
A spokesman with the Ministry of Information Industry
said the government and telephone operators have initiated emergency plans which
have helped ease the disruptions.
A spokeswoman with China Telecom said most of the
international-related Internet traffic is being "re-routed" via landline cables
connecting China and Europe. Satellite transmission is also being used but it
lacks the capacity of fibre-optics.
China in recent years has laid several fibre-optic
cables, which have advantages in capacity and efficiency compared to the legacy
cables in Europe which were laid several yeas ago, the China Telecom spokeswoman
said.
That has helped the Chinese mainland cushion the
present disruptions, she said.
Hong Kong, for instance, has been hit harder as it
relies on submarine cables.
China Telecom said it had provided assistance such as
restoring circuits and re-directing phone calls to operators in Hong Kong,
Taiwan, South Korea and Japan.
The danger of outages in undersea cables, however,
still looms large. It could pose a challenge for operators in dealing with
emergencies during major events such as the Beijing Olympics in 2008.
In 2001, a cable linking China and the United States
was disrupted more than four times, which affected Internet communications. Most
disruptions were caused by fishing boats.
A fishing boat, registered in Zhejiang Province,
damaged an undersea cable on April 6, 2004. This disrupted international
communications to some parts of China including Shanghai.
Fishermen had entered a forbidden zone designed to
protect the submarine cables. They were fined 6,000 yuan (760 U.S. dollars), the
first case of its kind under a regulation in 2004 to protect undersea cables.
In that incident, China Netcom suffered a loss of 6
million yuan (760,000 U.S. dollars), and an indirect loss estimated at 60
million yuan. It took China Netcom 15 days to restore the service.
(Source: China Daily)
Related: Ships to arrive to repair quake-broken
cable
BEIJING, Dec. 28(Xinhuanet) -- Ships carrying crews to
repair the two undersea fibre-optic cables, which were broken in earthquakes,
will arrive in the affected area in several days, an official of Taiwan's main
telecommunications company said Thursday.
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