Internet service in Lienchiang County should return to normal by the end of April after an international cable maintenance ship on April 20 begins repairing broken undersea connections around the Matsu Islands, the National Communications Commission said yesterday.
Lienchiang County’s online access is served by two marine cables — Taima No. 2 (台馬二號) cable connecting Dongyin (東引) Island to New Taipei City’s Tamsui District (淡水), and Taima No. 3 (台馬三號) cable connecting Nangan Island to Taoyuan.
Both cables were damaged separately on Feb. 2 and Wednesday last week leaving residents with slow Internet connections and unstable phone service.
Photo: Yu Chao-fu, Taipei Times
The Taima No. 2 cable was broken by a Chinese fishing boat, while the Taima No. 3 was damaged by a cargo ship, the commission said.
The incidents mark the second time that the two cables were broken within a short period.
Prior to the incident, the Lienchiang cables were frequently damaged by Chinese sand pump dredgers.
“It would take more than 10 minutes to send a text message, and sending a picture would take even longer,” Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) Lienchiang County chapter director Li Wen (李問) told the Taipei Times.
“The booking system in hostels and logistics services cannot function normally either, let alone viewing content and films on social media,” Li said.
Chunghwa Telecom (CHT) maintained service between Taiwan proper and Lienchiang County through a microwave backup system, which transmits telecom signals from a ground station in Yangmingshan National Park, Commission Vice Chairman and spokesman Wong Po-tsung (翁柏宗) told the Taipei Times.
Commission officials, Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) Legislator Chen Hsueh-sheng (陳雪生) and Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) Legislator Hung Sun-han (洪申翰) inspected the microwave system on Tuesday, Wong said.
The company was asked to accelerate and stabilize Internet and phone services for Lienchiang County residents by expanding the bandwidth, he said.
The microwave backup system offers a speed of 2.2 gigabits per second (Gbps), Wong said.
CHT is aiming to expand the bandwidth to 3.8 Gpbs next month, 4.382 Gpbs in June and 8.148 Gpbs by the end of this year, Wong said.
Cable communication from Matsu to Taiwan has a speed of 8 to 9 Gbps, he added.
The Ministry of Digital Affairs is offering additional frequency bands to help the telecom expand the microwave system, Wong said.
CHT yesterday said it would waive monthly fees for Lienchiang County subscribers of its fixed network, Hinet, on-demand media and mobile services this month.
Undersea cables connecting Lienchiang County islands with Taiwan proper were damaged five times in 2021 and four times last year, CHT said.
The cost of repairing one cable varies from NT$10 million to NT$20 million (US$330,251 to US$660,502) CHT said, adding that the operation of a cable maintenance ship costs US$40,000 per day.
CHT said that it is considering installing an alert system to help it identify culpable parties that damage the cables.
The KMT caucus told a news conference that the undersea cables are basic national infrastructure, and could cause a national security crisis when both are broken.
The incident also exposed the fragility of the basic infrastructure in Matsu, the caucus said.
The Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) caucus accused China of deliberately damaging the cables considering how often they are broken.
“Beijing should stop its ships from harassing Taiwan and Lienchiang County,” the DPP caucus said. “We also ask the KMT Deputy Chairman Andrew Hsia (夏立言) to protest the incident when meeting with Chinese officials, rather than following their political agenda.”
Japanese footwear brand Onitsuka Tiger today issued a public apology and said it has suspended an employee amid allegations that the staff member discriminated against a Vietnamese customer at its Taipei 101 store. Posting on the social media platform Threads yesterday, a user said that an employee at the store said that “those shoes are very expensive” when her friend, who is a migrant worker from Vietnam, asked for assistance. The employee then ignored her until she asked again, to which she replied: "We don't have a size 37." The post had amassed nearly 26,000 likes and 916 comments as of this
Taiwanese can file complaints with the Tourism Administration to report travel agencies if their activities caused termination of a person’s citizenship, Mainland Affairs Council Minister Chiu Chui-cheng (邱垂正) said yesterday, after a podcaster highlighted a case in which a person’s citizenship was canceled for receiving a single-use Chinese passport to enter Russia. The council is aware of incidents in which people who signed up through Chinese travel agencies for tours of Russia were told they could obtain Russian visas and fast-track border clearance, Chiu told reporters on the sidelines of an event in Taipei. However, the travel agencies actually applied
US President Donald Trump said "it’s up to" Chinese President Xi Jinping (習近平) what China does on Taiwan, but that he would be "very unhappy" with a change in the "status quo," the New York Times said in an interview published yesterday. Xi "considers it to be a part of China, and that’s up to him what he’s going to be doing," Trump told the newspaper on Wednesday. "But I’ve expressed to him that I would be very unhappy if he did that, and I don’t think he’ll do that," he added. "I hope he doesn’t do that." Trump made the comments in
Tourism in Kenting fell to a historic low for the second consecutive year last year, impacting hotels and other local businesses that rely on a steady stream of domestic tourists, the latest data showed. A total of 2.139 million tourists visited Kenting last year, down slightly from 2.14 million in 2024, the data showed. The number of tourists who visited the national park on the Hengchun Peninsula peaked in 2015 at 8.37 million people. That number has been below 2.2 million for two years, although there was a spike in October last year due to multiple long weekends. The occupancy rate for hotels