SAFE (cable system)

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The SAFE cable system (shown in red)
The SAFE cable system (shown in red)

The South Africa Far East cable is an optical fiber submarine communications cable linking Melkbosstrand, South Africa to Penang, Malaysia.

It was commissioned in 2002 and built by Tyco Submarine Systems of the USA with an initial capacity of 10 Gigabits per second, which is upgradeable to 130 Gigabits per second. It has four fiber strands, using Erbium-doped fiber amplifier repeaters and wavelength division multiplexing.

It has a total length of 13,104 kilometres, and is one of a pair of cables — SAT-3/WASC being the other — that provides high-speed digital links between Europe, West and Southern Africa and the Far East. It also provides redundancy for other cables travelling through the Middle East.

The whole SAT-3/WASC/SAFE system
The whole SAT-3/WASC/SAFE system

It has principal landing points at:

  1. Melkbosstrand, near Cape Town, Western Cape, South Africa (where it meets the SAT-2 and SAT-3 cable systems)
  2. Mtunzini, KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa (branch)
  3. Saint Paul, Réunion
  4. Baie du Jacotet, Savanne, Mauritius
  5. Kochi, India (branch)
  6. Penang, Malaysia (where it meets the FLAG and SEA-ME-WE 3 cable systems)

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