Russia said Tuesday it had laid fiber-optic cables to a chain of Pacific islands disputed by Japan, delivering high-speed internet to homes and businesses there despite protests from Tokyo.
An 815-kilometre(506-mile) fibre-optic cable had connected the Russian island of Sakhalin and several towns and villages on the islands of Iturup, Kunashir and Shikotan, said state-run telecoms operator Rostelecom. Tokyo has protested against the laying of the cable to the disputed chain known as the Kuril Islands in Russia and the Northern Territories in Japan.
The string of volcanic islands are at the heart of a long-running feud between the two countries that has prevented them signing a formal World War II peace treaty.
The underwater fibre-optic cable was inaugurated after Russia and Japan agreed late last year to accelerate talks to formally end World War II hostilities and the festering dispute over the islands.
"The implementation of this project is a milestone event for the Southern Kurils," Kremlin aide Sergei Ivanov said at the inauguration, adding it would open new opportunities for the region.
Comments
Comments are closed.