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Taiwan coast guard states investigation of harmed undersea cable television stymied by weather

Taiwan's coast guard has said that it believes a ship damaged an undersea communications cable television over the weekend, however that bad weather condition avoided its workers from boarding the vessel to investigate.

The coast guard had actually said on Saturday that a ship registered both to Cameroon and Tanzania was thought of harming an undersea communications cable television northeast of the island.

Late Monday, the coast guard stated that it had actually been not able to board the ship since of poor weather condition which the vessel had continued to Busan, South Korea. They stated that all 7 crew were Chinese nationals and that the owner, which it did not name, was based in Hong Kong.

Referencing occurrences of undersea cable televisions being harmed in the Baltic Sea in Europe in 2015, and judging from the historical tracks of the vessel, it is not possible to confirm its genuine objective, the coast guard said, referring to occurrences Baltic Sea nations have complained about given that Russia's intrusion of Ukraine in 2022.

China's Taiwan Affairs Office did not respond to a request for remark.

Taiwan, which China declares as its own area, has suffered repeated Chinese military activity in its environments, as well as operations such as balloon overflights and sand dredging.

Such activities, which it calls grey zone methods, are designed to put pressure on the island without direct fight.

A senior Taiwan security official informed Reuters that Taipei has asked Seoul for aid with the ship. South Korea's coast guard did not immediately react to a request for remark.

Taiwan's Ministry of Digital Affairs stated late Monday that communications had not been impacted by the damage to the cable television, which it expected to be fixed by Feb. 3.

In 2023, 2 undersea cable televisions connecting the Taiwan-controlled Matsu islands, which sit near to the Chinese coast, were cut, disconnecting the 14,000 people who live there from the web.

Authorities said at the time that their initial findings showed a Chinese fishing vessel and a Chinese freighter triggered the disturbance, but that there was no proof Beijing intentionally damaged the cables.

Taiwan has in recent years worked to build up its capacity to deal with emergency situations, from disasters to military conflict, consisting of alternative interactions such as satellites if its worldwide sea cables are cut off.

(source: Reuters)