• Finland boards oil tanker suspected of causing internet, power cable ou

    From Biden 10%@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 27 08:53:12 2024
    XPost: alt.fan.countries.finland, misc.transport.marine, sac.politics
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    HELSINKI, Dec 26 (Reuters) - Finnish authorities on Thursday seized a ship carrying Russian oil in the Baltic Sea on suspicion it caused the outage
    of an undersea power cable connecting Finland and Estonia a day earlier,
    and that it also damaged or broke four internet lines.

    The Cook Islands-registered ship, named by authorities as the Eagle S, was boarded by a Finnish coast guard crew that took command and sailed the
    vessel to Finnish waters, a coast guard official said at a press
    conference.

    "From our side we are investigating grave sabotage," said Robin Lardot, director of the Finnish National Bureau of Investigation.

    "According to our understanding, an anchor of the vessel that is under investigation has caused the damage," he added.

    The Finnish customs service said it had seized the vessel's cargo and that
    the Eagle S was believed to belong to Russia's so-called shadow fleet of
    ageing tankers that seek to evade sanctions on the sale of Russian oil.

    Two fibre-optic cables owned by Finnish operator Elisa linking Finland and Estonia were broken, while a third link between the two countries owned by China's Citic was damaged, Finnish transport and communications agency
    Traficom said.

    A fourth internet cable running between Finland and Germany and belonging
    to Finnish group Cinia was also believed to have been severed, the agency
    said.

    "We are coordinating closely with our allies and stand ready to support
    their investigations," said a spokesperson for the U.S. National Security Council, adding that the incident underscored the need for closer
    international cooperation on safeguarding critical undersea
    infrastructure.

    "We are following investigations by Estonia and Finland, and we stand
    ready to provide further support," NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte said
    in a post on social media X.

    Both the Finnish and Estonian governments held extraordinary meetings on Thursday to assess the situation, they said in separate statements.
    Baltic Sea nations are on high alert for potential acts of sabotage
    following a string of outages of power cables, telecom links and gas
    pipelines since 2022, although subsea equipment is also subject to
    technical malfunction and accidents.

    The European Union said it strongly condemned any deliberate destruction
    of the continent's infrastructure.

    "We commend the Finnish authorities for their swift action in boarding the suspected vessel," said a joint statement from EU foreign policy chief
    Kaja Kallas and the European Commission, the bloc's executive body.

    Repairing the 170-km (106-mile) Estlink 2 interconnector will take months,
    and the outage raised the risk of a strained power supply during the
    winter, operator Fingrid said in a statement.

    Estonian Prime Minister Kristen Michal said, however, that his country
    would continue to have sufficient access to electricity.

    The Eagle S Panamax oil tanker crossed the Estlink 2 electricity cable at
    1026 GMT on Wednesday, a Reuters review of MarineTraffic ship tracking
    data showed, identical to the time when Fingrid said the power outage
    occurred.

    United Arab Emirates-based Caravella LLCFZ, which according to
    MarineTraffic data owns the Eagle S, did not immediately respond to a
    request for comment.

    Peninsular Maritime, which, according to MarineTraffic acts as a technical manager for the ship, declined to comment outside of the company's opening hours.

    'DISRUPT AND DETER'
    Damage to subsea installations in the Baltic Sea has now become so
    frequent that it is difficult to believe this was caused merely by
    accident or poor seamanship, Estonian Foreign Minister Margus Tsahkna said
    in a statement.

    "We must understand that damage to submarine infrastructure has become
    more systematic and thus must be regarded as attacks against our vital structures," Tsahkna said.

    The 658 megawatt (MW) Estlink 2 outage began at midday local time on
    Wednesday, leaving only the 358 MW Estlink 1 in operation between the two countries, operator Fingrid said.

    Twelve Western countries on Dec. 16 said they had agreed on measures to "disrupt and deter" Russia's so-called shadow fleet of vessels in order to prevent sanctions breaches and increase the cost to Moscow of the war in Ukraine.

    "We must be able to prevent the risks posed by ships belonging to the
    Russian shadow fleet," Finnish President Alexander Stubb said in a post on social media X on Thursday.

    Lithuanian foreign minister Kestutis Budrys said the growing number of
    Baltic Sea incidents should serve as a stark and urgent warning to NATO
    and the European Union to significantly enhance the protection of undersea infrastructure there.

    Police in Sweden are leading an investigation into the breach last month
    of two Baltic Sea telecom cables, an incident German Defence Minister
    Boris Pistorius said he assumed was caused by sabotage.

    Separately, Finnish and Estonian police continue to investigate damage
    caused last year to the Balticconnector gas pipeline linking Finland and Estonia, as well as several telecom cables, and have said this was likely caused by a ship dragging its anchor.

    In 2022 the Russia-to-Germany Nord Stream gas pipelines running along the seabed in the same waters were blown up, in a case still under
    investigation by Germany.

    https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/finland-police-investigate-role- foreign-ship-after-power-cable-outage-2024-12-26/

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