Taipei - A strong earthquake in Taiwan damaged three undersea cables linking the island with South-East Asia, Europe and the US, affecting millions of internet and telephone users across Asia on Wednesday. Chunghwa Telecom Co, Taiwan's telecommunications monopoly, has activated its backup system and is relying on two remaining undersea cables.
'Repairing the undersea cables will take two to three weeks,' Chunghwa Telecom spokesman Lin Jen-hung told a news conference. The company also promised to compensate clients by charging lower fees.
Chunghwa said telephone calls to the US are down to 40 per cent of normal capacity, while calls to China are down to 10 per cent, and 11 percent for Japan.
The damaged submarine cables substantially slowed down internet traffic in China, which has more than 100 million users, and affected foreign web pages.
Service is 'interrupted,' a spokeswoman of China Netcom in Beijing told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa Wednesday
Service was also interrupted in Hong Kong, Thailand and as far away as Singapore, said providers Star Hub and Singapore Telecommunications.
SingTel said its undersea cable link with Europe was not affected.
Tuesday's 6.7 quake with its epicentre 22.8 kilometres under the ocean floor off Henghcun on Taiwan's southern tip has been followed by hundreds of aftershocks. Two people have died, 48 injured and several buildings have collapsed from the quake and aftershocks.
© 2006 dpa - Deutsche Presse-Agentur
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