Dutch emergency services hit by KPN telecoms outage
CGTN
[]
Royal KPN is Netherlands' national telecom provider. It also provides infrastructure backbone for other telecommunication providers. /VCG Photo

Royal KPN is Netherlands' national telecom provider. It also provides infrastructure backbone for other telecommunication providers. /VCG Photo

A nationwide telecommunications outage in the Netherlands knocked police and emergency numbers offline for roughly four hours on Monday before national carrier Royal KPN NV said service was restored.

The cause of the outage remained unclear, but the company said it did not appear to be the result of a security breach.

"We have no reason to think it was (a hack) and we monitor our systems 24/7," a KPN spokeswoman said.

Anna Posthumus, a spokeswoman at the National Coordinator for Security and Counter-Terrorism, said it is "too early to say" whether there may have been a cyber attack.

The outage was the largest in memory in the Netherlands, a nation of 17 million which prides itself on the technical prowess of its telecommunications infrastructure.

Spain's Telefonica has agreed to buy German mobile unit E-Plus from Dutch telecommunications company Royal KPN for 5 billion euros (6.58 billion U.S. dollars) plus shares, a deal that would get KPN a total of 5 billion euros in cash and a 17.6 percent stake in Telefonica. /Reuters Photo

Spain's Telefonica has agreed to buy German mobile unit E-Plus from Dutch telecommunications company Royal KPN for 5 billion euros (6.58 billion U.S. dollars) plus shares, a deal that would get KPN a total of 5 billion euros in cash and a 17.6 percent stake in Telefonica. /Reuters Photo

It originated on KPN's network, but also affected other telecommunications providers using its infrastructure backbone.

Emergency contact numbers went down, prompting the government to advise people to "go to the hospital yourself."

People with emergencies had been instructed on Twitter to go directly to hospitals, fire departments or local police stations.

The military police, which guards international borders, temporarily increased its presence at vital military locations and airports.

Source(s): Reuters