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Finland to try suspects of Baltic Sea cable breaches for sabotage

On Monday, the captain and two officers of a tanker that allegedly cut five underwater power and telecoms cable when it left Russia in 2024 and sailed along the Gulf of Finland will be tried in Helsinki. Investigators concluded that the Eagle S pulled its anchor along the seabed and cut the Estlink 2, a power cable linking Finland and Estonia and four internet lines. This led Finnish security forces, after ordering the vessel to enter Finnish territorial waters, to stop the vessel's voyage and board it by helicopter. The three defendants deny all charges and the captain has told Finnish public broadcaster YLE that the incident was a "marine accident". NATO allies in the Baltic Sea region were on high alert after the incident. It was one of several suspicious gas and cable outages that have occurred in the area since Russia invaded Ukraine.

This month, Finnish prosecutors charged the Cook Islands registered tanker's Georgian Captain and Indian First and Second Officers with aggravated criminal damage and aggravated interference in telecommunications.

The maximum prison term for aggravated criminal damage is 10 years, and aggravated interference in telecommunications can be up to 5 years.

The damage has caused serious problems for Finland's energy supply and communications, according to prosecutors. Repair costs are estimated at 70 million euros (60 million euro).

The defendants claim that Finland does not have jurisdiction over the case because the cables were damaged outside Finnish waters. The court said it would also take this argument into consideration. The Eagle S was detained by the Finnish authorities after the cables were severed, and then released again in March. They also upheld a travel restriction on the three defendants now standing trial.

An attorney for Caravella LLC FZ in the United Arab Emirates, owner of the Eagle S aircraft, also stated that Helsinki lacked jurisdiction to intervene. A Ukrainian was arrested last week over the 2022 attacks against the Nord Stream pipelines in Baltic Sea. Both Moscow and Western countries have described the explosions that largely cut off Russian gas supplies in Europe as sabotage.

(source: Reuters)