By
Eric Akasa
Huawei, a global information and
communications technology (ICT) solutions provider, today confirmed the originality
of their handsets following a recent notice from CCK to switch off over 3
million counterfeit mobile phones in the country, sparking fears among Kenyans
owning devices made in China.
“Huawei
has created a competitive edge by introducing original devices that ensure
quality user experience at affordable costs for Kenyans at all levels; as a
result of our heavy investment in customer centric research and development
(R&D),” said Wind Li, Huawei Kenya Representative Office CEO. “As a global
ICT leader serving 45 out of the top 50 global operators and a third of the
world’s population, Huawei adheres to the laws and regulations of the countries
we operate in while meeting all the product requirements,” he added.
The
company’s smartphone portfolio in Kenya include Huawei IDEOS, IDEOS X5, S7
Slim, and most recently Ascend Y100, Huawei Media Pad and Honor available in
Safaricom shops. Gaga and Boulder, also Huawei devices, are available at Orange
Shops. Huawei has customer care executives in all operators’ shops, and five
care centers in Nairobi with service centers at Malibu Telecom and Telebell at
View park Towers.
In
a statement, Mr. Francis W. Wangusi, Director General, CCK said, “The attention
of the Commission has been drawn to a misconception in the mobile phones market
that all handsets manufactured in China or by Chinese firms are counterfeit.
The Commission wishes to state that China has globally recognized companies
whose products and solutions are being used worldwide by top operators, and
which meet CCK requirements in respect to quality and type approval. Consumers
are therefore, advised to verify whether the handsets they wish to buy are
genuine by sending the IMEI of the handset via sms to 1555. The response
received from this system which has been set up in liaison with device
manufacturers should be the only fool-proof yardstick for determining whether
the handset is genuine or not. Members of the public are also advised to
purchase mobile phones from vendors who are duly licensed by CCK and should
demand to see the CCK type approval certificate of the model of the handset
they wish to buy.”
Huawei
has partnered with Kenyan operators such as Safaricom to bring smartphones in
the market. “Safaricom has had a long standing relationship with Huawei
whose technology ranks among the best in the world. The IDEOS was one of our
first affordable smartphones and the fact that it became one of our best
selling phones in the past year is testament to its quality and reliability in
the Kenyan market,” said Bob Collymore, CEO Safaricom.
Huawei
is the world’s second largest telecom solutions provider and it has entrenched
its presence in the global high-end smartphone market with flagship models like
Ascend P1 and Ascend D1 becoming bestsellers in China, West Europe, Japan,
Australia, Canada, among other markets. Last year, Huawei sold 150 million
consumer devices and smartphone shipments of 20 million units. In 2012, the
company is expected to achieve revenue of US$9 billion, with smartphone
shipments of 60 million units. Huawei is expected to launch Ascend P1 in Kenya
this month, making it the second country in Africa after South Africa which
launched last month.
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