Cable fault cuts off West Africa

Alchemist

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Large parts of West Africa are struggling to get back online following damage to an undersea cable.

The fault has caused severe problems in Benin, Togo, Niger and Nigeria.

The blackout is thought to have been caused by damage to the SAT-3 cable which runs from Portugal and Spain to South Africa, via West Africa.

Around 70% of Nigeria's bandwidth was cut, causing severe problems for its banking sector, government and mobile phone networks.

"SAT-3 is currently the only fibre optic cable serving West Africa," explained Ladi Okuneye, chief marketing officer of Suburban Telecoms, which provides the majority of Nigeria's bandwidth.

"So all West African countries have to use it."

Companies were being forced to use alternatives - such as using satellite links - to maintain connections to the rest of the world, he said.

Telkom South Africa, one of the shareholders of SAT-3, has not said what caused the problems but said it was aware of "a cable fault on the Benin branch that is being investigated".

The 15,000km (9,300mile) SAT-3 cable lands in eight West African countries as it winds its way between Europe and South Africa.

"The rest of the system is unaffected by this fault," a Telkom South Africa representative said.

Nigeria has been badly hit because around 70% of its bandwidth is routed through neighbouring Benin.

The network, run by Suburban Telecom, was set up to bypass Nigeria's principal telecoms operator Nitel which runs the SAT-3 branch cable which lands in Nigeria.

The SAT-3 consortium is in the process of sending a ship from Cape Town in South Africa to the area to investigate the fault.

Mr Okuneye said that by the time the relevant paperwork was done, it was likely to be "two weeks" before the ship arrived off the coast.

Meanwhile, Benin has been able to reroute its net traffic through neighbouring countries to get back online.

Mr Okuneye said his company was hoping to do the same but said the process would be slower because its bandwidth requirements were so much larger than those of the small republic.

Togo and Niger, which are not part of the SAT-3 consortium, remain offline.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/technology/8176014.stm
 
According to Rebekah Heacock, a blogger on OpenNet Initiative which monitors internet filtering and surveillance, internet access in Nigeria had been further complicated by the failure of Nigerian telecommunications operator Nitel to pay its dues to the SAT-3 Consortium, which has disconnected the Nigerian end of the cable.

Looking for info on SAT-3 cable outage in West Africa: damaged cable (http://bit.ly/70qO1) or failure to pay (http://bit.ly/cQCUD)?

Who do you believe ? Posted 2 days ago
Nigeria cut off from SAT3 over NITEL’s unpaid fee
The ‘SAT-3 Consortium’ cut Nigeria off the network because the troubled state owned Nigerian Telecommunications Limited (Nitel), sole custodian and commercial operator of the facility in Nigeria, failed to pay its dues.

News from 2 years ago (requires AllAfrica.com sub)
allAfrica.com: Nigeria: Nitel's Sat-3 Faces Threat of Closure
- 1:36pm
24 Apr 2007 ... Abuja — NITEL's main financial life line, the SAT-3 undersea optic cable, might be shut down at the end of April following an accumulated ...

Remember last year December when the majority of Middle East was without limited internet access due to a damaged cable off the coast of Egypt
 
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Don't worry, telkom will bail them out with our tax money...

How exactly would Telkom get hold of our tax money? I don't think money has gone from the Treasury into Telkom for several decades. Plenty of money has gone in the other direction, though.
 
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