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Baltic Sea countries look for to restrict further occurrences after cable breaches

European nations need to be prepared to deal with more events in the Baltic Sea following the current damage to undersea facilities, leaders of NATO nations in the area said on Tuesday ahead of a security meeting in Helsinki.

Baltic Sea nations are on

high alert

after a string of power cable television, telecom link and gas pipeline

outages

in the wake of Russia's intrusion of Ukraine in February 2022, and are going over an increased NATO existence.

Some 2,000 ships are crossing the Baltic Sea every day, making it challenging to monitor all of it, Latvian President Edgars Rinkevics said.

Let's face it, we can't ensure 100% protection however if we are sending out a strong signal then I think that such occurrences are going to decrease or even to stop, Rinkevics informed press reporters.

Finnish police last month

seized a tanker

carrying Russian oil and said they presumed the vessel had damaged the Finnish-Estonian Estlink 2 power line and 4 telecoms cable televisions by

dragging its anchor

across the seabed.

German Chancellor Olaf Scholz

said on Tuesday

that this and other current occurrences in the Baltic Sea should be assumed to be part of a hybrid strategy that is threatening European countries.

It is essential that we come together here now and talk about how we can interact to ensure greater security in the Baltic Sea region, Scholz said.

(source: Reuters)