Latvia and Sweden open an investigation by damage to a data cable in the Baltic Sea

A sea sculpture was subject to data transfer that damaged Latvia and Sweden early Sunday, which led to the opening of a criminal investigation into the accident, which became the third of its kind in the Baltic Sea over the past three months. The Radio and Television Government Center in Latvia, a data transfer services provider, reported that the damage to the cable between finals in Latvia and the Swedish island of Gotland did not affect clients, as alternative roads were used to transfer data. Prime Minister Afica Celina held a meeting with the ministers to discuss the incident. Selena said the authorities opened a criminal investigation and contacted international partners and pointed out that the NATO is also participating in the investigation. She added, in a post on the “X” platform: “This morning we received information stating that the data cable between Latvia and Sweden was damaged in the Baltic Sea, in the part that falls within the exclusive economic zone of Sweden. We work with our Swedish allies and the NATO to investigate the accident.” Read more: A war war underwater. The marine cables become a tempting target for the Saboteurs, Venita Sproojein, a spokesman for the Radio and Television Government Center, explained to the Baltic News Agency: In a related context, the Letse armed forces sent a periodic ship to investigate a ship that was presumably in the accident. The Swedish Prime Minister said via “X”: “The information indicates that at least one data cable between Sweden and Latvia was damaged in the Baltic Sea. It is noteworthy that the accident comes as part of a series of similar incidents in the Baltic Sea. In December, it suspected that an oil tanker with a separate anchor was a separate accident.