Landing Point · OM Oman
| Cable | Status |
|---|---|
| OMRAN/EPEG | Active |
RTT measurements to this landing point from 2026-03-19 through 2026-06-10 - live ICMP round-trip time via our monitoring probes. Recomputed daily. ✓ No anomalies detected in the monitored period.
| Probe | Location | Samples | Avg |
|---|---|---|---|
| #1014597 own probe | Tbilisi GE | 11 | 164.9 ms |
| #1014969 own probe | Jerusalem IL | 11 | 164.2 ms |
| #1014473 own probe | Minsk BY | 9 | 159.8 ms |
| #1014589 own probe | Almaty KZ | 9 | 201.7 ms |
| #1015313 own probe | Sevastopol UA | 4 | 182.7 ms |
| #1015523 own probe | Moscow RU | 4 | 154.9 ms |
| #6410 own probe | Sao Paulo BR | 2 | 292.5 ms |
| #6427 own probe | Sydney AU | 2 | 129.6 ms |
| #1015984 own probe | Balancer IL | 2 | 169.4 ms |
| #1015563 own probe | Saint Petersburg RU | 1 | 154.6 ms |
Diba, Oman is a submarine cable landing point in Oman. One international cable system comes ashore here, and together they reach 1 other countries.
Most of the 1 systems here are domestic; the exception reaches Iran, making Diba a stepping stone that carries the region's traffic off Oman's national grid toward the wider network.
Documented capacity and vintage vary across the roster: OMRAN/EPEG (600 km and in service since 2013). Facts for every system are on its own cable page.
A single system lands here, so this point is a genuine dependency rather than a redundant one. Because these systems share the same short stretch of coast and shore infrastructure, a localized event at the landing zone can reach far more capacity than the cable count alone suggests. GeoCables tracks each of these systems individually for exactly this reason.
GeoCables watches these systems continuously rather than describing them once. Since 2026-03-10 we have logged 127 route anomalies across 71 cable systems worldwide. One has touched this location's own cables: a 429% round-trip latency spike on OMRAN/EPEG (2026-06-03, recovered by 2026-06-03). These were latency events on the systems' wider routes, not outages at the landing itself, and they cleared on their own. This record grows as we detect more, which is the difference between a directory entry and a monitored asset.
The largest access networks in Oman sit behind this coastal capacity: Oman Telecommunications Company (S.A.O.G) (50.1% of users), Omani Qatari Telecommunication Company SAOC (24.5% of users), Awaser Oman LLC (15.4% of users) and Oman Future Telecommunications Company SAOC (3.9% of users). See the full national picture for Oman.
This landing point is part of a wider shoreline of connectivity. Within roughly 200 kilometres, the coast also hosts Fujairah (56 km away, 14 cable systems), Kalba (63 km away, 3 cable systems) and Khasab (63 km away, 2 cable systems). Each of these sites brings its own cables ashore, and together they define how much independent capacity, and how much redundancy, this stretch of Oman really has: if one landing fails or a cable needs maintenance, traffic can often be carried through a neighbour.
The physical environment here is monitored too: the GeoCables event feed has logged M4.9 earthquake · 61 km W of Bandar Abbas, Iran (May 2026) and M4.9 earthquake · 101 km N of Mīnāb, Iran (Jun 2026) near this coastline, and our latency measurements are checked against every such event to see whether the local cables were affected.
In short, Diba, Oman carries international traffic for Oman across 1 independent cable system reaching 1 country on 1 continent, and GeoCables monitors each of them in real time.
View actual submarine cable routing from Diba, Oman - with backbone nodes, distance calculations, and latency estimates
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