This handout photo taken on Jan 28, 2022 by the Australian Defence Force shows Air Force Air Movement Operators loading a watercraft onto a C-130J Hercules aircraft at RAAF Base Amberley in the Australian state of Queensland to deliver to Tonga. (SGT BEN DEMPSTER / AUSTRALIAN DEFENCE FORCE / AFP)
SYDNEY – Tonga was reconnected to the world on Tuesday following repairs to a submarine cable, officials said, a month after a volcanic eruption and tsunami cut communications to the remote Pacific island nation.
"People on the main island will have access almost immediately," Tonga Cable chief executive James Panuve told Reuters by telephone, after a repair ship handed over the restored cable on Tuesday afternoon.
School chaplain Penisimani Akauola Tonga was among those getting back online for the first time since the disaster struck the tiny island nation in mid January.
"First post on Facebook since January 15th! So Blessed for the opportunity! Malo Tonga Cable & Tonga Government!" he wrote.
One of two major service providers, Digicel said in a statement all its customers on Tongatapu and Eua islands were connected to the outside world as data connectivity was restored
Tongans have struggled with makeshift satellite services as the repairs to the cable were made.
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The repair ship Reliance took 20 days to replace a 92-kilometer section of the 827 km submarine fiber optice cable that connects Tonga to Fiji and other international networks.
Panuve thanked telecommunications companies in neighboring Pacific islands, particularly New Caledonia, which provided lengths of cable when Tonga ran out.
The next job would be to repair the domestic cable connecting the main island of Tongatapu with outlying islands that were worst hit by the tsunami, which could take six to nine months, said Panuve.
"We don't have enough cable," he added.
Still, communication using interim satellite services to outlying islands would improve after Tonga's networks switched the main island from satellite to fiber, he said.
One of two major service providers, Digicel said in a statement all its customers on Tongatapu and Eua islands were connected to the outside world as data connectivity was restored.
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Digicel Tonga chief executive, Anthony Seuseu said in a statement that the company would look at increasing investment and network optimization to prepare better for a catastrophic event… in the future".
Digicel's Pacific business was bought by Australian telecommunications company Telstra Corp in October with financing by the Australian government.