It was not immediately clear what caused the outages.
Evan Koronewski, a spokesman for the Communications Security Establishment, a government agency responsible for cybersecurity and signals intelligence, told AFP that “at this time, CSE has no indication this is related to malicious cyber threats.”
Industry Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne said he had spoken with the Rogers CEO and shared “the frustration of millions of Canadians.”
“This unacceptable situation is why quality, diversity & reliability are key to our telecom network,” Champagne said on Twitter.
Police in several cities, including the capital Ottawa and Toronto — Canada’s largest metropolis — warned that people were unable to call 911 for emergencies due to the outage.
The city of Montreal also said its municipal services line was down.
Across the country, Rogers’ customers complained about not being able to make calls or use the internet.
Several major banks said money transfers and cashless payments could not be processed. Telephone and online banking, as well as ATM withdrawals, were also affected.
The Royal Bank of Canada tweeted that the outage was “affecting all financial institutions” in the country.
Coffee shops and retailers in several city centres posted signs saying they were accepting “cash only” for purchases.
And the Canada Border Services Agency tweeted that arriving travellers would have to use paper forms to provide mandatory travel and public health information, as its mobile app had been affected by the outage.
AFP