Suspicions have been directed at a Chinese ship, the Yi Peng 3 (R), which is pictured being monitored by a Danish naval patrol vessel in the sea of Kattegat

Operators say damaged Baltic Sea cables 'fully restored'

· RTE.ie

Two Baltic Sea telecommunications cables that were severed in Swedish territorial waters have been repaired, their operators said, amid a probe into a Chinese ship in the area.

An undersea telecom cable connecting Finland and Germany that was cut on 18 November was back in operation and "fully restored", Finnish network operator Cinia said.

"The fault was repaired slightly faster than expected," Cinia CEO Ari-Jussi Knaapila said.

On 17 November, the Arelion cable running from the Swedish island of Gotland to Lithuania was also damaged.

It too had been repaired and was working normally, Martin Sjogren, press officer for the Swedish telecommunications operator Arelion confirmed to AFP.

The telecommunications cable being laid in the Baltic Sea off the shore of Helsinki in Finland in 2015

Finnish, Swedish and Lithuanian authorities have established a joint team to investigate the damaged cables, with the support of Eurojust, the European Union's agency for criminal justice cooperation.

Suspicions have been directed at a Chinese ship - the Yi Peng 3 - which ship tracking sites said had sailed over the cables around the time they were cut, although there is nothing to indicate that it was involved in the incidents.

The Yi Peng 3 has remained anchored in the Kattegat Strait between Sweden and Denmark since 19 November.

China said it was "willing to work" with a probe.

European officials have said they suspect sabotage linked to Russia's invasion of Ukraine.

Russia has rejected the comments as "absurd" and "laughable".