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DAILY NEWS AND INFORMATION FOR THE GLOBAL GRID COMMUNITY /
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Breaking News - Networking:
Oman To Become Hub For Region's First Terabit Cable System
FLAG Telecom, a provider of international wholesale network transport and
communications services, announced that Omantel, the national telecoms
operator in Oman, has signed a dual landing station agreement for the FALCON
cable system. This new high-capacity resilient loop will provide multiple
landings throughout the Gulf region, with submarine links stretching to Egypt
in the west and to Hong Kong in the east. The Gulf loop and east and west
links will interconnect at two landings in Oman. Omantel has also signed a
capacity agreement with FLAG Telecom, purchasing international connectivity on
the FALCON cable system, providing direct connectivity to any point on the
FLAG global network.
Engineer Mohammed Bin Ali Al Wohaibi, Omantel executive president said: "Oman
is geographically ideally located at the heart of the FALCON route, providing
important communication links from the world's business centers to India and
Asia to the east and to Egypt in the west. We are looking forward to the
introduction of FALCON project and anticipate that it will meet the burgeoning
broadband demand from the fast growing Gulf and wider Middle East region not
just for this decade, but for the decade beyond."
Patrick Gallagher, CEO of FLAG Telecom, said: "FALCON will bring enormous
amounts of capacity to a region previously underserved by international
connectivity. Oman is now positioned to be a new regional hub for the advanced
broadband communication services to be carried on FALCON. The new cable system
is designed to unlock the broadband opportunity along the entire route and
provide the first direct terabits per second link between the world's two
fastest growing economies -- India and China."
Walid Irshaid, president of Middle East and Africa for FLAG Telecom, said: "We
are delighted to have concluded this agreement. FALCON will be the only cable
system to provide fully protected services within the Gulf and will allow
direct international connectivity from the region to the main business centers
around the world for the first time. We look forward to gathering again next
year in Muscat to celebrate the inauguration of the FALCON landing station."
FALCON will include the Gulf region's first self-healing submarine network
ring providing all countries connected to the high capacity cable with
extremely reliable, high quality connectivity. Countries that have the
potential to directly access this resilient connectivity include Oman,
Bahrain, Kuwait, Qatar, Iraq and Iran. All of these countries have shown
interest in joining FALCON and most are in advanced discussions with FLAG
Telecom regarding their participation. Branching units can be added along the
entire FALCON cable route to allow more countries in the region to connect to
the system as their communications needs continue to expand.
Leaving the Gulf, the western link of the FALCON system follows a route across
the top of the Arabian Sea and through the Red Sea, where it will interconnect
with FLAG's global network at Telecom Egypt's landing station at Suez.
Traveling from Oman along its easterly link, FALCON will cross the Arabian Sea
to a new Reliance-owned landing station at Mumbai, India. At this point FALCON
will interconnect seamlessly to Reliance's pan-India 80,000-kilometer
high-speed backbone network linking approximately 1,100 cities and towns
across the length and breadth of the country. From Chennai, on the East coast
of India, FALCON will link India to Hong Kong where the cable will once again
integrate with FLAG's global network.
FLAG's fibre-optic cable network already spans the globe and the company has
an acknowledged reputation for end-to-end network and service management from
a single point of customer contact, underpinned by exceptional quality and
service support. FLAG offers customers east and west routing, meaning traffic
can be switched at any time to avoid a cable cut or natural disaster. FALCON
is planned to provide additional resilience across the major route from Egypt
to Hong Kong and particularly around the Middle East.
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