
Project, branded WorldLink, will comprise undersea cable from Fujairah, UAE to Iraq’s Faw peninsula
An Iraqi-Emirati consortium plans a $700 million subsea-and-terrestrial data cable linking the United Arab Emirates to Turkey via Iraq, one of the project’s backers said, just over a week after the announcement of a Saudi-backed fibre-optic project in Syria.
Gulf neighbours Saudi Arabia and the UAE are each trying to tap into demand for connectivity in the region and become hubs for AI infrastructure, including data centres, amid wider economic and geopolitical competition across the region.
The Iraqi-UAE project, branded WorldLink, would comprise an undersea cable from Fujairah in the UAE to Iraq’s Faw peninsula on the Gulf, which will then run overland north to the Turkish border, Ali El Ekabi, head of Iraq’s Tech 964 — one of the three members of the consortium — told Reuters.
Five-year programme
El Ekabi said the project would be privately funded and rolled out in phases over the next five years. It aims to ease congestion and reduce transit times versus the traditional paths that run through the Suez Canal.
The Emirati and Saudi governments did not respond to requests for comment.
Saudi Arabia and Syria announced on February 7 plans to set up a fibre-optic network under a wider investment package. The project, dubbed SilkLink, is a roughly $1 billion push to rehabilitate Syria’s infrastructure and position it as a data route between Asia and Europe.
In response to a request for comment on the UAE-Iraqi project, the Syrian telecoms ministry told Reuters in a statement: “Additional infrastructure investment improves route diversity and resilience for everyone.”
“SilkLink is designed to deliver low-latency and high-availability … and we expect to be highly competitive on both performance and resilience,” it said.
Besides Tech 964, WorldLink’s sponsors include Iraq-Kurdish DIL Technologies and UAE-based Breeze Investments, according to El Ekabi, son of Iraqi real estate billionaire Namir El Ekabi. Iraq, which is trying to market itself as a stable transit corridor after decades of conflict, launched a $17b “Development Road” rail-and-road plan in 2023 to connect Faw to Turkiye.



