Communications in Azerbaijan |
Azerb.com
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The telephone system in Baku does not work too well, although it is being upgraded. The government, through the Ministry of Communications and Azertel controls the telephone system. An estimated 200,000 clients are awaiting telephone installation, providing a bonanza for mobile phone operators.
The majority of telephones are in Baku and other main cities - about 700 villages still don't have public phone service. The quality of local calls varies considerably depending on which telephone exchange is used. All long distance calls must use Azertel's lines. The Nakhchivan exclave is connected to the 'mainland' via a satellite service.
International: cable and microwave radio relay connections to former Soviet republics; connection through Moscow international gateway switch to other countries; satellite earth stations-1 Intelsat and 1 Intersputnik. Intelsat provides service to Turkey and through Turkey to 200 more countries, additional satellite providers supply services between Baku and specific countries. Azerbaijan is a signator of the Trans-Asia-Europe Fiber-optic line (TAE), although the lines are not yet laid the Turkish satellite and a microwave between Azerbaijan and Iran provide world-wide access through this system.
International calls are difficult to make. From some exchanges, you can now dial abroad directly, but from many, you need to go through the operator. If that is the case, first have to book your call, and then wait until the operator calls you back. With some operators, if you don't speak a bit of Azeri or Russian this may become a little tricky.
Domestic calls: see list of telephone
codes
for Azeri cities and towns. See also the list of emergency
numbers.
Cellular telephones can be purchased and used locally. Two companies share the market, Azercel - a subsidiary of Aztelecom - and Bakcell (Motorola). GSM coverage is still basic, but growing fast. Coverage includes the areas around Baku, Sumgait, Shemaka, Ganja, Astara, Mingecavir, Agstafa and Nakhichevan (see maps).
Due to high roaming charges the best option for foreign visitors is to buy a SIM-card from one of two cellular phone operators and get local phone number. You are required to show ID since all the mobile numbers have to be registered. Top-up vouchers are also easily available. The cost of SIM card is around 8 Euros, plus a 7 Euros top-up voucher will allow around 30 minutes of talk time within Azerbaijan. Incoming calls to your mobile are free of charge.
To call cellular telephones from Baku:
(if calling a mobile phone from abroad, use +994 5... - omit the 0)
To call from mobile to landline dial first 012 then phone number.
SMS (short message service) is available
for both Azercell and Bakcell mobile phones.
Azerbaijan leads the way in per capita mobile phone use in the CIS with over 1,456,500 lines (2004). In the words of BBC correspondent Chloe Arnold: "Everyone I know in Azerbaijan owns a mobile phone, from the president's advisers to the bearded old woman who sells lemons at the end of our street. Some people have two or three. [.... ] Mobiles have become as much a part of Azeri culture as jumping over bonfires to bring good luck during the Novruz spring festival, or slaughtering a lamb and stepping over its still flailing body on the way to your wedding. No one bothers to switch their telephones off in restaurants or theatres. Last time I went to the cinema, a man in the front row finally answered his mobile on the 14th ring and, after telling the caller very loudly that he was "IN THE CINEMA!" proceeded to talk to him through the rest of the film. [.... ] But a lot of the time here in Azerbaijan, mobile phones are just for show. Azeris spend so much on the latest Wap digital voice-recognition model with built-in camera, they can't afford to use it. When someone rings them, they scribble down the number that appears on the screen without answering the phone and then call them back from a landline. Landlines are free of charge."
Public pay phones are available for local calls. To use them, purchase tokens from the Telephone Exchange or from some shops and kiosks (token allows a call of indefinite duration). However, it's usually easier just to go into a store and ask to use their phone; they usually won't mind. You will also find phone offices manned by an attendant who will place the call for you.
There are only a few card operated
public phones. These allow calls to any destination. The cards can be bought
from central post and telephone offices and at the railway station.
E-mail via several local internet
service providers is available, as well as for public access from a number
of internet cafés (please see the internet
section).
The Azeri postal system is functional, but cannot be considered secure or reliable. Registering mail and packages may help the chances of letters and parcels arriving at their destination, but they will not arrive any faster. The postal code system is that of the former Soviet Union.
The central post office is to the left of the Azerbaijan Hotel, on Azerbaijan Avenue, 41 - tel. 984000. If you are after some nostalgia, the post office still sells some Soviet era postcards (while stocks last!). For the philatelist very interesting interesting stamp editions are available, usually printed in multicolored lithography. Some Azeri stamps from the 1918-1920 republic are now quite expensive.
Express mail services:
ASE Express
9 Sidbeily, 37006 Tel. 986448, 975574 Fax 921638 DHL
EMS
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Federal
Express
147 B. Saforgly, 370009 Tel. 940453 PLM
UPS
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see also: free Fax, economy, transportation, Baku airport, driving, internet, summary, images |
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