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Internet Outage: Operators Begin Repair on Undersea Cable Cuts

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Internet Outage: Operators Begin Repair on Undersea Cable Cuts | Daily Report Nigeria
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The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) reports that service providers are actively working to restore internet connectivity following the disruption experienced on Thursday.

The submarine cable cuts on Thursday caused outages for several African internet service providers.

It left telecommunications subscribers and bank users stranded for hours as digital transactions and internet communications were paralyzed.

However, early on Friday, the NCC announced that the issue was being resolved.

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Reuben Muoka, the NCC Director of Public Affairs, conveyed the development in a statement.

Operators of these cables have commenced repairs already, and services are gradually being restored.

The statement read:

They have promised to work round the clock to ensure that services are restored to the affected countries within the shortest possible time. It is important to bring this information to the knowledge of corporate and individual consumers on these services.

“A combination of cable cuts, resulting in equipment faults on the major undersea cables along the West African Coast, have negatively impacted data and fixed telecom services in several countries of West Africa, including Nigeria, Ghana, Senegal, Cote de Ivoire, among others.

“The cuts occurred somewhere in Cote d’Ivoire and Senegal, with an attendant disruption in Portugal. Cable companies West African Cable System (WACS) and African Coast to Europe (ACE) in the West Coast route from Europe have experienced faults while SAT3 and MainOne have downtime.

“Similar undersea cables providing traffic from Europe to the East Coast of Africa, like Seacom, Europe India Gateway (EIG), Asia- Africa-Europe 1 (AAE1), are said to have been cut at some point around the Red Sea, resulting in degradation of services across on these routes.

“In Nigeria and other West African countries, Internet access and speed have experienced disruptions in the networks of service providers in the affected countries.”

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