Finnish authorities seize ship and crew after undersea cable cut, pursuing criminal charges — Finnish special forces board ship, detain all 14 crewmembers
Cables and pipelines in the Gulf of Finland have been damaged four times in less than 1.5 years.
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At around 5 a.m. Local time, an undersea telecommunications cable between Estonia and Finland was damaged for the fourth time in roughly 1.5 years. Finnish special forces have taken control of the cargo ship Fitburg, detained its 14-member crew, and revealed that they were citizens of Russia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, and Azerbaijan.
Authorities are currently investigating whether the vessel's movement and anchoring caused the incident, reports Postimees. Despite the damage, the owner of the cable claims connectivity remains intact due to extensive network redundancy.
Elisa, a leading telecom provider in Estonia and Finland and the cable's owner, alerted authorities under standard incident protocols at around 5 a.m. Although the fault was located inside Estonia's exclusive economic zone, the ship crossed into Finnish waters shortly afterward, which allowed Finnish authorities to detain the vessel and open a criminal case. When the ship was detained, its anchor chain was in the sea, the report notes.
Officials emphasize that the communications infrastructure between Estonia and neighboring countries is very redundant: Estonia is connected abroad via 12 international cables, so the loss of individual links does not translate into systemic outages.
“We could talk about a critical situation only if just one cable were still operational, but at the moment we have a significant margin,” said Liisa Pakosta, Estonia’s justice and digital affairs minister. “It is also worth noting that such breakdowns are usually not even reported, because they occur fairly often. One of the cables runs between Läänemaa and Hiiumaa — it is not part of these 12 and is a local cable. But communications on Hiiumaa are also functioning.”
Automatic Identification System (AIS) records from MarineTraffic indicate that near the route of Elisa’s submarine cable, Fitburg slowed from 8.9 to 7.3 knots, with a multi-minute data gap suggesting speed may have dropped even further. This naturally causes suspicions that the vessel’s anchor hit the cable when the AIS was disabled.
The ship in question is the Fitburg, a 132.2-meter general cargo vessel built in 2001. The vessel is currently owned by Turkey-based Fitburg Shipping Co Ltd (which happens to be a single-vessel company) and the ship sails under the flag of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines as of August 1, 2025. Safety management and commercial operations of the vessel are handled by Istanbul-based Sarfo Denizcilik ve Ticaret A.Ş and Albros Shipping & Trading Co. For now, the actual beneficiaries of Fitburg Shipping Co Ltd and Albros are unknown. Meanwhile, there is a growing list of evidence that Albros manages vessels that carry cargo of Russia origin.
This new cable damage episode adds to an already long list of similar incidents in the Gulf of Finland in recent quarters. In just 1.5 years, cables and pipelines in the Gulf of Finland were damaged three other times: On October 8, 2023 the Balticconnector gas pipeline, along with multiple telco cables between Estonia and Finland were damaged. On November 17, 2024, three undersea communications cables between Sweden and Lithuania were broken. And on December 28, 2024 the EstLink 2 power cable between Estonia and Finland was damaged. More broadly, there was about a half-dozen incidents involving damage of underwater cables and pipelines in the Baltic Sea in recent years.
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King_V I'm sure the responsible party has no intention of doing anything for the crew. Still, should definitely be investigated, with harsh penalties for whichever nation is ultimately responsible for it. And no, they're not getting their ship back.Reply
Make it as expensive as possible for anyone thinking of continuing to do this. -
USAFRet Reply
Don't stoop to their level.S58_is_the_goat said:Why not cut the cables to Russia? Nothing of value will be lost... -
hotaru251 Reply
Or make the punishment extreme....ala torture/execution. This way people less likely to risk it and if they do get caught they might be willing to oust their employer to make sure they also suffer.King_V said:Make it as expensive as possible for anyone thinking of continuing to do this.
And you may think: "thats a bit extreme" and I would agree however people need to realize sabotage is a business & look at business...they don't stop when they aren't really bothered by the punishment. Extremes have their place.
Only when the punishment is way more punishing than the reward does business change. -
USAFRet Reply
Again....don't stoop to their level.hotaru251 said:or make the punishment extreme....ala torture/execution. -
hotaru251 Reply
In an ideal world we wouldnt need to however if you know current punishments wont stop it, it escalates then what are you gonna do?USAFRet said:Again....don't stoop to their level.
Punish it an an extreme level and it eventually lessen or stop all together. In the long run its a better result -
USAFRet Reply
Execution for the 3rd shift Filipino cook that just trying to make breakfast?hotaru251 said:in an ideal world we wouldnt need to however if you know current punishments wont stop it, it escalates then what are you gonna do?
Punish it an an extreme level and it eventually lessen or stop all together. In the long run its a better result -
hotaru251 Reply
There is a difference between a random accident and a planned sabotage.USAFRet said:Execution for the 3rd shift Filipino cook that just trying to make breakfast?
Like anything an investigation would be done to decide which it likely was. -
USAFRet Reply
Missing my point completely. Whatever.hotaru251 said:there is a difference between a random accident and a planned sabotage.
Like anything an investigation would be done to decide which it likely was. -
S58_is_the_goat Reply
It's the only solution to this problem, everyone in Europe would agree. Prove me wrong 😂USAFRet said:Don't stoop to their level.