logo
Sweden intercepts Bulgarian ship over damaged Baltic cable

Sweden intercepts Bulgarian ship over damaged Baltic cable

Observer27-01-2025
SOFIA: The Swedish coast guard seized a Bulgarian ship after a fibre-optic cable under the Baltic Sea linking Sweden to Latvia was damaged, its owner said on Monday. Latvia sent a warship on Sunday to investigate the damage, while Swedish prosecutors opened an "aggravated sabotage" investigation. Nations around the Baltic Sea have scrambled to bolster defences after the suspected sabotage of undersea cables in recent months, with some observers blaming Russia.
The Swedish coast guard on Sunday instructed the Bulgarian ship "to go into their territorial waters and it is now on anchor where an investigation ... is ongoing," Alexander Kalchev, CEO of Navigation Maritime Bulgare (Navibulgar), owner of the Vezhen, said. Images of the vessel published by Swedish media appeared to show a broken arm on one of Vezhen's anchors. Kalchev denied involvement in any sabotage. "I am convinced that we cannot say ... that this was a malicious act," he added. The Malta-flagged vessel carrying fertilizer from Ust-Luga in Russia and headed for South America was sailing in "extremely bad weather" on Saturday based on the information given to him by the crew, Kalchev said.
An inspection found that "one of the ship's anchors was damaged and the anchor had dropped into the sea, which means that it was possible that it had dragged along the seafloor," he said, adding the anchor was then pulled up. The Swedish prosecutor in charge of the case, Mats Ljungqvist, told AFP that "the ship suspected of aggravated sabotage" was currently located off the coast of Karlskrona, near the small island of Aspo, but would not confirm the vessel's name.
According to marine traffic websites, the Vezhen is anchored at that location, with two Swedish coast guard vessels next to it. "Staff from several Swedish authorities" have been on board the vessel since Sunday evening as part of the investigation, Ljungqvist said. "The case is primarily being handled by (intelligence agency) Sapo, and I am in charge of the preliminary investigation. We are also receiving excellent assistance from the Swedish coast guard, the Swedish police's National Operations Department as well as the military," he said.
Prime Minister Evika Silina said Riga had notified the Swedish authorities and that the two countries were working together on the incident. Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson confirmed he had been in contact with Silina, and said Sweden, Latvia and Nato were closely cooperating on the matter. Nato this month announced it was launching a new monitoring mission in the Baltic Sea involving ships and aircraft to deter attempts to target undersea infrastructure. European Union President Ursula von der Leyen expressed "full solidarity" with countries affected by the incident. "The resilience and security of our critical infrastructure is a top priority," von der Leyen wrote on X. — AFP
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

11 new arrests over Serbian train station disaster
11 new arrests over Serbian train station disaster

Observer

time4 hours ago

  • Observer

11 new arrests over Serbian train station disaster

BELGRADE: Eleven people, including a former minister, were arrested in Serbia over a train station disaster in which 16 people died. The concrete canopy of the newly renovated station in the northern city of Novi Sad collapsed on November 1, 2024, in a disaster widely blamed on corruption and poor oversight. It sparked a wave of student-led protests and led to the resignation of Prime Minister Milos Vucevic and the fall of his government. The 11 include former construction, transport and infrastructure minister Tomislav Momirovic as well as former acting director of the state-run Serbian Railway Infrastructure company Nebojsa Surlan, prosecutors said. Another former transport minister, Goran Vesic, who was one of the first to resign after the accident, was wanted in the case but was hospitalised on Thursday, prosecutors said. The news site said Vesic underwent emergency surgery. Since the accident, protests have been growing across Serbia, with some bringing hundreds of thousands of people to the streets to demand a transparent investigation and early elections. Thousands of people rallied in new protests late on Friday in several cities, including the capital Belgrade, to commemorate nine months since the accident. — AFP

Fighters kill 15 farmers, children in northeast Nigeria
Fighters kill 15 farmers, children in northeast Nigeria

Observer

timea day ago

  • Observer

Fighters kill 15 farmers, children in northeast Nigeria

KANO: IS-affiliated fighters killed over a dozen farmers and children in a gun attack and mine explosion in Nigeria's northeast Borno state, the epicentre of a fighter conflict, two members said. Fighters from IS West Africa Province (ISWAP) opened fire on a group of farmers and children riding in an open van and a motorised rickshaw outside Gurnowa, a village near the garrison town of Monguno on Thursday, the militias said. Separately, a woman farmer and her three children fleeing the area died when their wooden cart hit a landmine planted by the fighters near the attack scene before they withdrew, the leader said. "Our men have evacuated 11 bodies to Monguno while another team has left to bring the woman and her three children", said Babakura Kolo, a leader assisting the military in fighting in the region. The 11 were returning to Monguno after working on their farms when they were attacked by the fighters, said Ibrahim Liman, another member of the group who gave the same toll. The insurgents made off with the van and the rickshaw of the slain farmers, the two leader said. "The woman and her three children had abandoned their farm in hearing gunshots and were heading back to Monguno when the cart they were pushing rolled over an explosive buried by the terrorists, killing them all", Liman said. From the images of the 11 victims seen by a reporter, most were shot in the head, including two females and two children. Gurnowa, five kilometres from the military fortified town of Monguno, has been deserted for years following fighter attacks, with its inhabitants forced to seek shelter in makeshift camps in Monguno. Monguno, 140 km north of the regional capital Maiduguri, has been barricaded for the past four years to ward off attacks. — AFP

Thailand, Cambodia trade allegations of truce break
Thailand, Cambodia trade allegations of truce break

Observer

time3 days ago

  • Observer

Thailand, Cambodia trade allegations of truce break

Thailand and Cambodia exchanged allegations on Wednesday of breaching a ceasefire deal which has largely halted the open combat that engulfed their frontier. The nations agreed a truce starting on Tuesday after five days of clashes that killed at least 43 on both sides, as a long-standing dispute over contested border temples boiled over into fighting on their 800-kilometre boundary. But Thailand's foreign ministry said its troops in Sisaket province 'came under attack by small arms fire and grenade assaults launched by Cambodian forces' in an offensive which continued until Wednesday morning. 'This represents a flagrant violation of the ceasefire agreement,' said a foreign ministry statement. Thai government spokesman Jirayu Huangsab also reported overnight clashes but said in a statement, 'the Thai side maintained control of the situation' and 'general conditions along the border are reported to be normal' from 8:00 am. On Wednesday, a Cambodian defence ministry official accused Thailand of breaching the ceasefire, intended to end fighting which has seen the two countries evacuate a total of more than 300,000 people from the border region. At a temple in Thailand's Surin city serving as a shelter and field kitchen 50 kilometres away from the frontier, volunteer Thanin Kittiworranun said evacuees remain in limbo. 'We don't believe Cambodia will hold the ceasefire,' the 65-year-old said. But a journalist on the Cambodian side who heard a steady drumbeat of artillery fire since fighting began last Thursday reported hearing no blasts between the start of the truce and Wednesday morning. And Beijing said deputy foreign minister Sun Weidong hosted a Shanghai meeting with Thai and Cambodian officials where both 'reaffirmed to China their commitment to abide by the ceasefire consensus'. The armistice got off to a shaky start in the early hours of Tuesday, with Thailand accusing Cambodia of continuing attacks in 'a clear attempt to undermine mutual trust' -- before peace generally prevailed. Meetings between rival commanders along the border — scheduled as part of the pact — went ahead, with Thailand's army saying de-escalation steps were agreed including 'a halt on troop reinforcements or movements that could lead to misunderstandings'. But later in the day, a foreign affairs spokeswoman for Bangkok's border crisis centre, Maratee Nalita Andamo, warned: 'In this moment, in the early days of the ceasefire, the situation is still fragile'. Jets, rockets and artillery have killed at least 15 Thai troops and 15 Thai civilians, while Cambodia has confirmed only eight civilian and five military deaths. — AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store