Embattled Australia telco giant hit by another major outage


Optus said the outage on Sept 28 impacted thousands of people in New South Wales and lasted more than nine hours. — Bloomberg

SYDNEY: Australian telecommunications giant Optus said Sept 29 it had suffered a network outage that prevented calls to emergency services, just over a week after a similar interruption that has been linked to four deaths.

Optus – one of Australia's top telecoms providers – said the outage on Sept 28 impacted thousands of people in New South Wales and lasted more than nine hours.

The firm said it had "confirmed with police that all callers who attempted to contact emergency services are OK".

"Optus continues to investigate the cause," it added.

This month Optus said it suffered an outage that impacted 600 people across South Australia, Western Australia and the Northern Territory for at least 10 hours.

The outage prevented calls to emergency services and has been linked to four deaths.

Australia's finance minister Katy Gallagher told national broadcaster ABC that Sunday's incident was "more disappointing news off the back of the major disruption that happened the week before".

"I think there's questions that Optus are going to have to answer about what happened in the last fortnight and their response to it," she said.

On Friday, Australia's National Broadband Network experienced an outage in Western Australia that impacted customers' ability to make emergency calls, police said.

Opposition communications spokeswoman Melissa McIntosh told ABC the interruptions were "extraordinary".

"People across Australia need to have confidence in our triple-0 network," she said, referring to the country's main emergency services hotline.

"These are lives that are at risk."

Last week, Optus announced details of an independent review that will probe the series of events that took place and determine why emergency calls did not connect.

The firm was also fined US$66mil (RM278.02mil) last week for selling products to vulnerable customers between 2019 and 2023 that they did not need or want, leaving many in debt.

Federal Court Justice Patrick O'Sullivan labelled the company's conduct as "extremely serious" and "appalling".

Optus was also fined US$7.9mil (RM33.28mil) after an outage halted its mobile and internet systems for nearly 12 hours in 2023. – AFP

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

Robotics pioneer says the field has lost its way
Google warns staff with US visas against international travel due to embassy delays, Business Insider says
Sleep cots and graham crackers at Elon Musk’s child care program
Three tips to give your kids the best holiday present you can get – a healthier relationship with screens
Opinion: Australia just banned kids from social media. Shouldn't we all?
Meta's Dina Powell McCormick quits board, may stay on as adviser
EU Council backs digital euro with both online and offline functionality
AI boom drives data-center dealmaking to record high, says report
Nvidia-Intel deal cleared by US antitrust agencies
Italy sells digital payment unit PagoPA to Poste, state mint for up to 500 million euros

Others Also Read