Philip Ngunjiri, East African - After a high-stakes cat and mouse game with pirates off the Somali coast, the first submarine cable linking East Africa and the rest of the world went live last week even though security costs escalated.
The commercial launch of the privately owned Seacom undersea fibre-optic cable simultaneously in Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, Mozambique and South Africa on Thursday is expected to provide the region with high-capacity connectivity at much lower rates than the existing satellite networks do.
Backhauls linking Johannesburg, Nairobi and Kampala with the coastal landing stations were also established, and Seacom is now working with its national partners to presently commission the final links to Kigali and Addis Ababa.
Seacom chief operating officer Jean-Louis Parmentier told The EastAfrican that the pirates delayed their schedule by 55 days.
“In the real sense, we fell behind by 20 days,” Mr Parmentier said.
The firm had to engage the services of a top-notch security firm on the three cable-laying ships for 55 days, overshooting the budget by 5 per cent.
“This was taken care of by a contingency fund and will not be passed over to the consumers,” Mr Parmentier hastened to add.
East Africans can now expect faster Internet services, huge increases in bandwidth, an end to slow dial-up connections and crackling long-distance calls and, above all, a reduction in the cost of accessing the Internet, concluded a blogger in the numerous blogospheres that came up the moment the Seacom cable landed.
The cable runs along the eastern seaboard of Africa, creating a digital superhighway that links South Africa, Mozambique, Tanzania and Kenya with Europe and South Asia.
It extends to Marseilles, France, where it connects to Interoute’s network providing a speed-of-light route to Europe, North America and the Middle East, as well as access to Interoute’s range of wholesale and enterprise services.
The sub-sea cable will offer 1.28 terabits per second of capacity, enabling high definition TV, peer-to-peer networks and IPTV, and supporting surging Internet demand.
“Fibre-optic cable investments in rural areas and landlocked African countries are going to multiply when Seacom’s plan to bring access to low-cost bandwidth succeeds,” said Seacom International CEO Brian Herlihy. “The cable is fundamental in unlocking the continent’s Internet potential.”

