[Infowarrior] - Vietnamese fishermen 'salvage' Internet lines

Richard Forno rforno at infowarrior.org
Fri Jun 8 13:20:13 UTC 2007


      
EE Times: Semi News
Vietnamese fishermen 'salvage' Internet lines

Reuters     
EE Times
(06/07/2007 12:26 AM EDT)

http://www.eetimes.com/news/semi/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=199902343

HANOI ‹ Fishermen who were allowed to take unused war-era undersea copper
cables have gone too far, "salvaging" fibre-optic lines providing some of
Vietnam's Internet and other international communications.

A Ministry of Posts and Telematics report seen on Thursday urged authorities
in central and southern regions to prevent the theft of cable, whose loss
underdeveloped Vietnam can ill afford.

"The general assessment is that most fishermen, and in some cases even the
local authorities, had a very simple understanding of the consequences of
the theft of under-sea fibre optic cable," the report on a May 31 to June 5
investigation said.

State-run newspapers said an 11-km (7-mile) section of stolen TVH
fibre-optic cable would be replaced at a cost of $5.8 million. It was part
of the line that transmits data from Vietnam to Thailand and Hong Kong.

In all, about 43 km (27 miles) of fibre-optic cable is missing, including
about 32 km (20 miles) stolen from a cable operated by a Singaporean
company.

"Now just one undersea cable connects Vietnam with the outside world," Thanh
Nien (Young People) newspaper said.

The theft began after the government in the southern province of Ba Ria-Vung
Tau last year allowed fishermen and soldiers to salvage undersea copper
cable laid before 1975 to sell as scrap.

The Vietnam war in which the United States backed a South Vietnam
government, ended in April 1975 when communist North Vietnam troops captured
Saigon, now Ho Chi Minh City.

The permission to salvage the cable has been withdrawn, the ministry has
asked the Coast Guard to increase patrols and inspections and officials have
started a public relations campaign to educate fishermen about the
importance of the cables.

Copyright 2007 Reuters.




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