A Bulgarian ship has been released after Swedish authorities cleared it of deliberately sabotaging an underwater cable in the ...
The cargo ship Vezhen did damage a subsea cable linking Sweden and Latvia last month but it was an accident, not sabotage, a Swedish prosecutor said on Monday, adding that the Maltese-flagged vessel ...
The incident was one of several recent cases of undersea cable ruptures, sparking fears over potential Russian sabotage and ...
Swedish prosecutors have decided to release a vessel belonging to a Bulgarian shipping company after ruling out initial ...
The prosecutor said the Vezhen's anchor severed the cable but that the incident was related to a combination of bad weather, ...
Weather conditions and deficiencies in equipment and seamanship” were behind last month’s disruption, prosecutors say.
Sweden has released a vessel suspected of causing damage to an undersea fibre optic cable between Latvia and Sweden on Jan. 26, the Nordic country's prosecution authority said ...
Estonian Infrastructure Minister Vladimir Svet does not believe in accidental damage to cables in the Baltic Sea, given the ...
Suspected sabotage of undersea cables in the Baltic continues to spread in the waters around Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Sweden, with a recent incident leading to the arrest of a Norwegian ...
Swedish prosecutors confirm no sabotage in the Sweden-Latvia cable break, attributing it to weather, equipment failures, and ...
The majority of critical undersea infrastructure is located in international waters, which means would-be saboteurs can take ...
The 32-year-old minister of infrastructure of Estonia visited Kyiv and Odesa last week, where he signed a memorandum within ...