South Korea’s telecoms carriers brace themselves for traffic surge ahead of impeachment vote
Sign up now: Get insights on Asia's fast-moving developments
Protesters attending a rally in Seoul calling for the impeachment of South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol on Dec 11.
PHOTO: REUTERS
SEOUL - South Korea’s network and mobile service providers have stepped up their emergency preparedness ahead of the impeachment vote against President Yoon Suk Yeol on Dec 14
The top three telecommunications carriers – SK Telecom, KT and LG Uplus – are taking measures to prevent service malfunctions, including increasing network capacity in areas where large crowds are expected to gather for rallies in Seoul.
During the first impeachment vote on Dec 7, massive rallies near the National Assembly in Yeouido
The three companies temporarily installed additional network stations during last week’s rallies, but said they struggled to predict the exact number due to huge discrepancies in the figures offered by police and the organising committee.
For the Yeouido rally on Dec 7, police said around 100,000 people joined, while the organising committee said more than one million people participated.
This week, the carriers plan to install 36 temporary network stations. Of the total, 29 will be set up in Yeouido, while Gwanghwamun and Yongsan will have six and one, respectively. Thirty-nine supplementary stations will be installed near the National Assembly.
In the meantime, Naver and Kakao, the nation’s top two internet companies, have also boosted server capacity and enhanced traffic monitoring.
Their users suffered service malfunctions for hours due to a spike in traffic after President Yoon issued a short-lived martial law decree on Dec 3.
According to market tracker Mobile Index, KakaoTalk, the top mobile messenger app, saw its average daily use time per person surge from 23.33 minutes on Dec 1 to 34.44 minutes on Dec 3.
During the same period, new installations of encrypted messaging app Telegram soared from 1.17 million to 1.52 million, over concerns of possible media censorship following the martial law fiasco. THE KOREA HERALD/ASIA NEWS NETWORK


