Vietnam officially removes
phone card service
A woman walks by a damaged, deteriorated public phone booth in Ho Chi Minh City in this
Tuoi Tre file photo.
The image of a Vietnamese resident inserting
a plastic calling card at a public phone booth to make a call is now
something of the past as the service was Monday officially stopped.
The Vietnam Posts and Telecommunications Group (VNPT) announced on Monday
that they have officially ceased the phone card service, putting an end to
the most popular public telephone mode back in the late 1990s in the country.
In late 1997, public phone booths, operated by the insertion of a phone card
instead of coins, began to emerge in some big cities and quickly won the
choice of local students, white-collar workers, and foreign visitors, thanks
to its wide range of conveniences and features.
The service continued to enjoy its reputation in the next 10 years, while
VNPT decided to install 10,000 additional phone booths countrywide between
2002 and 2006.
The image of a customer making phone call with the card inside tourism spots,
hospitals and schools have become popular at that time.
However, along with the rapid growing of the telecommunication market, with
the constantly declining fares for the Internet and mobile phones, telephone
cards have gradually lost popularity.
“With the peak time between 1997 and 2002, the cardphone has well fulfilled
its ‘historical duty’,” telecommunication experts commented.
TuoitreNews
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