Flights grounded and police forced to communicate by text on duty as IT outage hits Netherlands

World

Flights have been grounded and police officers were forced to communicate by text while on duty as a network outage at the Dutch ministry of defence caused major IT failures across the country.

The extent and cause of the problems are not yet known, but a spokesperson for the Dutch defence ministry confirmed the issue can be traced back to one of their networks that is also used by other parts of the Dutch government.

Travellers at Eindhoven – the Netherlands’ second-largest airport – were stuck since early morning with flights from budget airlines Ryanair and Transavia cancelled.

Follow Sky News on WhatsApp

Keep up with all the latest news from the UK and around the world by following Sky News

Tap here

“There is no air traffic at all and we have very little information about the cause,” spokesperson Judith de Roy said.

All flights at the airport were grounded until at least 5pm local time (4pm UK time), resulting in at least 14 cancelled flights.

Some flights were diverted to Germany’s Weeze Airport, about 90km from Eindhoven, as well as Schiphol and Belgium’s Brussels Airport – both around 125km away.

The airport also serves as a military airport operated by the Dutch defence ministry. The country’s largest airport, Amsterdam’s Schiphol, has not reported any problems.

More on The Netherlands

The alarm and the communications systems for emergency workers were also affected.

The coastguard said they were not reachable by phone or radio while police officers used mobile phones and text messages to stay in contact rather than their normal communication system.

Read more from Sky News:
Two superyacht crew members under investigation
Museum seeks boy who smashed 3,500-year-old pot
Murder suspect found after falling through ceiling

Telecom company KPN was also experiencing a major outage with its mobile service, but the company said it was unclear if the problem was related to the issues at the defence ministry.

The Dutch national cybersecurity centre said it is not yet known if the outage is a result of a cyber attack. The defence ministry said it was unclear how long the outage may last.

Articles You May Like

Brazil’s former president among dozens facing charges of attempting coup
Indian Air Force Collaborates With IISc and FSID to Develop Strategy for Reliability-Centered Maintenance
France fire Six Nations warning as All Blacks left to ponder what might have been
Tesla converts Shell gas station into Supercharger and it looks awesome
France boss concerned for players’ mental health