A spate of sabotage attacks on underwater cables, allegedly perpetrated by a Russian "shadow fleet", have shown global telecommunications infrastructure is poorly protected against deliberate acts of ...
Most of the world's data travels via ocean cables, which are at risk of frequent sabotage. DW explains where they lie and how they are protected.
By Fuad Shahbazov in Durham Ukraine is positioning itself as a key transit hub for Azerbaijani gas to Europe, a move that ...
In just three months, three incidents of damage to Baltic Sea underwater cables have taken place. While accidential cable ...
After languishing for decades, the Baltic countries have dusted off their fusty image as a second-rate travel destination and ...
The cargo ship Vezhen did damage a subsea cable linking Sweden and Latvia last month but it was an accident, not sabotage, a Swedish prosecutor said on Monday, adding that the Maltese-flagged vessel ...
The severing of electricity ties to oil- and gas-rich Russia and switching to European grids is steeped in geopolitical and ...
OSLO - A Norwegian cargo ship with an all-Russian crew suspected of damaging a Baltic Sea telecoms cable has been released by authorities in Norway after no link to the incident was found ...
had been involved in serious cable damage that was discovered last weekend in the Baltic Sea. The authorities didn’t elaborate, but said they were searching the ship and conducting interviews.
The topic of deadly remnants from past conflicts regularly resurfaces in the media and beyond. Unfortunately, this issue ...