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<a href="https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-50851420">https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-50851420</a><br>
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<span>Google goes offline after fibre cables cut<br>
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<div>Severed fibre optic cables disrupted internet access in parts of eastern Europe, Iran and Turkey on Thursday.<br>
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<div>The issue, which lasted for about two hours, was caused by multiple fibre cables being physically cut at the same time, a highly unusual thing to happen.<br>
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<div>Google said its services were among those unavailable in the region for about 30 minutes.<br>
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<div>The company told internet service providers to connect to its other servers to "route around the problem".<br>
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<div>In a statement, the company blamed "multiple simultaneous fibre cuts", which are very rare.<br>
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<div>BBC Monitoring confirmed that internet access in Bulgaria, Iran and Turkey had been disrupted for about two hours on Thursday morning.<br>
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<div>Sadjad Bonabi, a director at Iran's Communications Infrastructure Company, said two cuts happened at once, one between Iran and Bucharest and the other on a line to Munich.<br>
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<div>This disrupted traffic on one of the major fibre cables in the region. But Mr Bonabi said traffic had been routed on to "healthy" connections in western and southern Iran.<br>
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<div>No explanation for the cut cables has been offered.<br>
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<div>Google told the BBC it would publish a full incident report in the coming weeks.<br>
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<div>International internet cables have been mistakenly cut in the past.<br>
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<div>In 2011, a 75-year-old woman admitted damaging fibre-optic cables linking Georgia to Armenia while scavenging for copper.<br>
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<div>And in 2018, a fibre link in Orkney was accidentally cut during the construction of a new hospital.<br>
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