Police officers questioning suspicious ship crew in Liepāja harbor amid Baltic Sea cable damage investigation.
Police officers questioning suspicious ship crew in Liepāja harbor amid Baltic Sea cable damage investigation.
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Update: Ship crew questioned in Liepāja Baltic Sea cable damage probe

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Latvian police are interrogating the crew of a suspicious ship believed responsible for damaging a fiber-optic cable near Liepāja on January 2. The vessel was inspected in harbor without detention. This follows an earlier report on the incident and comes amid repeated Baltic Sea cable damages.

Following the initial report earlier today, Latvian authorities have advanced their investigation into the January 2 damage to a private company's fiber-optic cable in territorial waters off Liepāja, Latvia's third-largest city on the Baltic coast north of Lithuania.

Prime Minister Evika Siliņa confirmed the damage, noting no impact on Latvian communications users. Marine analysis shows the suspicious ship first passed over an inactive cable before altering course toward the affected one, which links Šventoji in Lithuania to Liepāja, spanning about 65 kilometers.

Police examined the ship in Liepāja harbor, with the crew cooperating fully; no arrests or seizures have occurred. The probe continues to establish the cause.

This marks the second Baltic Sea cable incident within a week, after a New Year's Eve damage to an Estonia-Finland data cable, where Finnish authorities seized a Russia-bound ship suspected of anchor sabotage. Since Russia's invasion of Ukraine nearly four years ago, such damages have raised suspicions of hybrid attacks attributed to Russia.

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X discussions highlight Latvian police boarding and questioning the crew of a suspect ship in Liepāja harbor over fiber-optic cable damage on January 2. OSINT accounts detail a criminal investigation for possible intentional sabotage in territorial waters. Reactions note no service disruptions or detentions, but express concern over a pattern of Baltic Sea cable incidents amid hybrid threat suspicions.

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Illustration of a fishing boat sinking off Busan following a collision with an LPG carrier.
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Fishing boat sinks off Busan, killing captain and leaving two missing

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A 79-ton fishing boat sank after colliding with a liquefied petroleum gas carrier off Busan on Thursday, leaving the South Korean captain dead and two Indonesian crew members missing.

Police are investigating a suspected illegal threat after a Waxholmsbåt captain reported that people aimed a rifle-like weapon at the vessel at Bergs brygga on Möja.

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Three suspected Russian shadow ships are forcibly anchored off Trelleborg with 36 crew members stranded aboard for months. More were confined on Sunday when Jin Hui was boarded. The Coast Guard warns of interventions if more vessels enter Swedish waters.

A boat carrying 15–20 youths capsized and sank in the harbor in Smögen on Friday evening. All climbed out of the water unharmed.

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A Chinese research ship has successfully tested a new electro-hydrostatic actuator capable of slicing undersea cables at depths up to 3,500 meters. The trial, conducted aboard the Haiyang Dizhi 2, bridges the gap from development to practical application, according to official reports. The demonstration coincides with heightened concerns over sabotage of global submarine cables.

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