After a fiber optic cable was damaged near Sweden, Latvia sent a patrol boat to inspect a suspicious vessel in the Baltic Sea. Sweden later said it seized a vessel believed to have carried out the sabotage.
An undersea fiber optic cable between Latvia and Sweden belonging to Latvia State Radio and Television Center (LVRTC) was damaged in the Baltic Sea on Sunday. The cable linked the Latvian town of Ventspils with Sweden’s Gotland island.
“We have determined that there is most likely external damage and that it is significant,” Latvian Prime Minister Evika Silina told reporters following an extraordinary government meeting.
“We are working together with our Swedish Allies and NATO on investigating the incident, including to patrolling the area, as well as inspecting the vessels that were in the area,” Silina wrote later on X, adding that the cable was damaged in Sweden’s exclusive economic zone.
Sweden’s prosecutors announced late Sunday they had launched a preliminary investigation into the damage and seized control of a vessel “suspected of carrying out the sabotage.”
“We are now carrying out a number of concrete investigative measures, but I cannot go into what they consist of due to the ongoing preliminary investigation,” senior prosecutor Mats Ljungqvist said in a statement.
The Latvian Navy had sent a patrol boat to inspect a ship suspected of involvement, and also had launched an investigation of two other ships in the area.
No impact on users
Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson said his country is working closely with Latvia and NATO. “Sweden will contribute important capabilities to the ongoing effort to investigate the suspected incident,” he wrote on X.
The cable is believed to be severely damaged.
“Given that the cable lies at a depth exceeding 50 meters (164 feet), the exact nature of the damage can only be determined once cable repair work begins,” LVRTC said in a statement.
LVRTC stated that it continues to provide services via alternative data transmission routes. “Currently, there may be delays in data transmission speeds, but for the most part this does not impact end users in Latvia,” the center said.