- An Amazon Web Services (AWS) data centre in the United Arab Emirates saw a temporary shutdown and a small fire after unidentified objects struck the site.
- The outage comes amid heightened regional tensions, with simultaneous cloud connectivity issues reported in Bahrain.
What Happened
Amazon’s cloud computing division, AWS, reported a fire and power shutdown at one of its data centres in the UAE after objects hit the facility in the early hours of Sunday. The incident occurred at the mec1-az2 Availability Zone, part of AWS’s Middle East Central (UAE) region, according to company statements.
AWS said the objects caused sparks and a fire, prompting the local fire department to cut power as crews worked to contain the blaze. The company described the event as isolated to that Availability Zone and noted that other zones in the UAE region remain operational.
Restoration of full connectivity in the affected zone could take several hours, AWS said, as it works through the incident. Outages and power issues have also been flagged at another AWS data centre in Bahrain, signaling broader cloud service instability across the Gulf region.
AWS did not confirm or deny any connection between the incident and the ongoing Middle East conflict, which has seen retaliatory strikes across Gulf states.
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Why It’s Important
AWS is a cornerstone of global cloud infrastructure, hosting services for businesses, governments, and critical systems on its platforms such as EC2, S3, and RDS in regions worldwide (AWS documentation notes these services are hosted across Availability Zones to enhance resilience).
A fire or power shutdown in a major cloud hub raises questions about risk management and continuity planning for organizations that rely on single-region deployments. Customers often mitigate this by architecting multi-region or multi-provider redundancy, but smaller firms may lack such setups.
The broader context—ongoing conflict in the Middle East—adds another layer of uncertainty. If infrastructure sites become damaged or inaccessible due to regional violence or missile strikes, cloud service reliability could face sustained challenges. AWS’s cautious stance, neither affirming nor denying a direct link to regional hostilities, underscores this uncertainty.
Critically, this incident highlights that even distributed and resilient cloud services are vulnerable to localized disruptions. It may prompt firms to revisit cloud risk assessments, especially for workloads in geopolitical hotspots.
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