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Yi Peng 3, a Chinese-registered cargo ship, was traveling from Russia to Egypt when it passed the two cables at around the same time each was cut on Sunday and Monday, according to Marine Traffic ...
On 19 November 2024 the Royal Danish Navy observed the Chinese cargo ship Yi Peng 3 in the Baltic Sea after it was suspected to be involved in the sabotage. [28] [29] The detention of the Chinese vessel was the first enforcement action under the Convention for the Protection of Submarine Telegraph Cables since the Transatlantic cables incident ...
A Chinese cargo ship is under investigation related to severed data cables in the Baltic Sea. A probe found that the vessel steamed ahead while dragging its anchor for more than 100 miles.
Undersea cables between Finland-Germany and Lithuania-Sweden were cut, potentially sabotaged. ... a Chinese-flagged cargo ship that had departed from Russia's Ust-Luga port in the Gulf of Finland ...
Sweden asks for China's cooperation over Baltic Sea cables cut while a Chinese ship was nearby HARPSUND, Sweden (AP) — Sweden has formally asked China to cooperate in explaining the recent rupture of two data cables on the Baltic Sea bed in an area where a China-flagged vessel had been sighted, Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson said Thursday.
A Chinese-flagged cargo ship draws attention after undersea internet cables were severed, leading European countries to investigate possible sabotage. ... being pulled ashore by a cable-laying ...
Newnew Polar Bear is a fully-cellular feeder container ship with a container capacity of 1,620 twenty-foot equivalent units (TEU) and a deadweight tonnage of 15,952 tons. [2] [5] The ship is 169 metres (554 ft) long, 27.2 metres (89 ft) wide, and has a displacement of 23,847 tonnes (23,470 long tons) [3] when loaded to the maximum draught of 9 metres (30 ft). [8]
The 1884 Convention for the Protection of Submarine Telegraph Cables was the first international compact to deal with underwater cables. [8] It proscribes breakage or damage of such cables — except by belligerents engaged in open war — and permits the naval forces of state parties to engage in certain enforcement actions against suspected offenders.