Mobile on the rocks

More about this object

Public phone in Gibraltar.

Just as the issue of communication of Ceuta and Melilla was important to the Spanish government, the British sought to establish direct communications with Gibraltar with equal fervor. What's more, "The Rock" was the starting point for the cables running to Malta and on to India. The first submarine cable connected Porthcurno in Cornwall, and Gibraltar in 1870. This direct line was particularly important during the periods of tension, particularly between Great Britain and Spain. Land connections could be easily broken, as Gibraltar's residents learned in 1969, when the Franco regime cut off telephone lines between Spain and the British colony at the beginning of so-called "Garlic War." The border was closed hermetically and the ferry service to Gibraltar was shut down. The land line connectivity was eventually restored only in 1986. This was preceded by some goodwill gestures, such as allowing telephone communications the day before Christmas, 1975. The normalization was clearly apparent, as the actual communication blockade continues – Spain does not recognize Gibraltar's international direct dialing code. The result is that Gibraltar cell phones work everywhere except in Spain. When Gibtel customers travel to Spain and find themselves out of their own base station, they can only receive Moroccan GSM transmitters.

How to cite this page

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Slawomir Lotysz, 'Mobile on the rocks', Inventing Europe, http://www.inventingeurope.eu/globalisation/mobile-on-the-rocks

Sources

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  1. Morris, D.S., and Haigh, R.H. Britain, Spain, and Gibraltar, 1945-1990: the eternal triangle. London, New York: Routledge, 2002.
  2. “Spain Cuts Local Telephone Lines to Gibraltar.” The Times, October 2, 1969: 1.

About this tour

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Islands and Enclaves

The boundaries of Europe have never been fixed in any direction. Even though the Western end of the Eurasian continent attracts the most attention, sometimes centuries-old enclaves elsewhere have long held claims to be European. In the case of North Africa in particular, these "enclaves" of the continent have served as connecting nodes in imperial networks, and maintaining ties now with "home countries" in Europe is also a technological challenge.


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