Nigeria, Ghana: Full List of African Countries Affected by Internet Outage and Its Severity

Publish date: 2024-05-23

Legit.ng journalist Esther Odili has over two years of experience covering political parties and movements.

Following the reported failures in multiple subsea cables, West and Central Africa regions are experiencing a widespread internet blackout.

On Thursday, March 14, subsea cable providers were affected by major cuts to undersea submarine cables, disrupting internet traffic in parts of the continent.

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As reported by the BBC, the disruption extended to South Africa, Ghana, Kenya, the Ivory Coast, Liberia, Cameroon, and Benin.

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The West Africa Cable System (WACS), the Africa Coast to Europe (ACE), MainOne, and SAT3 cables were affected. The disruption has so far impacted businesses significantly and disrupted the daily lives of citizens in the affected areas and regions.

Legit.ng reported that MTN Group and sources within MainOne disclosed the rupture of multiple major undersea cables on Wednesday, March 13, saying it was responsible for the internet connectivity disruptions.

Nigerian banks have been severely affected by the damaged submarine cables and subscribers of various network operators in the country, leading to internet downtime.

Countries affected by undersea cable cut

According to BusinessDay, here are the severity levels of affected countries;

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  • Ivory Coast: Severe
  • Liberia: High
  • Benin Republic: High
  • Ghana: High
  • Burkina Faso: High
  • Togo: Medium
  • Cameroon: Medium
  • Gabon: Medium
  • Namibia: Medium
  • Niger: Medium
  • Nigeria: Low
  • Lesotho: Low
  • South Africa: Low
  • MainOne gives update on undersea cable repair

    Legit.ng reported earlier that MainOne, a company providing digital infrastructure services in West Africa, announced that it may take an extra two to three weeks for a ship to collect replacement parts for submarine cables and journey from Europe to West Africa.

    They stated that an external incident caused the network outage. Initial investigations revealed a cut in their submarine cable system off the coast of Cote D’Ivoire in the Atlantic Ocean.

    Source: Legit.ng

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