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Old Jul 17, 2007 | 1:24 pm
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SIM card in Delhi

Can onw buy a SIM card in DEL with talk time without hassels? I am told that buyig aSIM card can be accomplished, but activation takes a while for foreigners. Is that correct? How many days does one have to wait? If this is incorect, any ideas on the type of SIM card or locations where one can bu it? Thanks in advance.
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Old Jul 17, 2007 | 1:58 pm
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Originally Posted by Yaatri
Can onw buy a SIM card in DEL with talk time without hassels? I am told that buyig aSIM card can be accomplished, but activation takes a while for foreigners. Is that correct? How many days does one have to wait? If this is incorect, any ideas on the type of SIM card or locations where one can bu it? Thanks in advance.
Taking a copy of your passport and visa, it's still possible to get a prepaid SIM card activated same day in some places in Delhi at least. There's always the "ask the ___ (e.g., driver) to get one for you (even if in his/her name)" possibility too if that will go faster.

In DEL, same day is still possible. (Email coming your way.)

[Sidenote: In Jammu & Kashmir (at least Srinagar) a prepaid SIM getting same-day activation is generally not possible for most all. The upside of a Kashmir-acquired SIM is that the Kashmir prepaid SIM will work in all of India while Indian prepaid SIMs will generally not work in Kashmir.]
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Old Jul 17, 2007 | 2:33 pm
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Thanks for your wonderful suggestion and e-mail.

Originally Posted by GUWonder
Taking a copy of your passport and visa, it's still possible to get a prepaid SIM card activated same day in some places in Delhi at least. There's always the "ask the ___ (e.g., driver) to get one for you (even if in his/her name)" possibility too if that will go faster.

In DEL, same day is still possible. (Email coming your way.)

[Sidenote: In Jammu & Kashmir (at least Srinagar) a prepaid SIM getting same-day activation is generally not possible for most all. The upside of a Kashmir-acquired SIM is that the Kashmir prepaid SIM will work in all of India while Indian prepaid SIMs will generally not work in Kashmir.]
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Old Jul 17, 2007 | 9:45 pm
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Remember to check whether you can still make outgoing calls 7-8 days after the activation. Airtel has twice "lost" the documentation (photocopy of passport) I submitted in order to activate the SIM card for the first time, and cut me off after 7 days until I raised hell with their area manager in the middle of the night.
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Old Jul 18, 2007 | 1:26 am
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Originally Posted by Savage25
Remember to check whether you can still make outgoing calls 7-8 days after the activation. Airtel has twice "lost" the documentation (photocopy of passport) I submitted in order to activate the SIM card for the first time, and cut me off after 7 days until I raised hell with their area manager in the middle of the night.
You are not the only person whom I've heard report a like experience and am glad to hear you had some success by going after the area manager.

The idiocy of the whole procedure is that this "documentation" requirement is being done for so-called "security" reasons and yet it is unlikely that such a cut-off/denial serves much of any useful security purpose when fraudulently acquired ID in India is rather easy to get anyway and when most cell phones used in criminal activities in India -- at least going by the CBI and other LE/security agencies' many more investigations running circles around suppliers rather than acquirers -- seem to be stolen or otherwise fraudulently acquired in the first place.
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Old Jul 18, 2007 | 6:14 am
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Originally Posted by Yaatri
Can onw buy a SIM card in DEL with talk time without hassels?
There's a little Airtel shop just as you exit customs that sells prepaid SIMs. You need your passport (unlikely to be a problem as you're coming from immigration anyway), they'll snap a digital pic and then fill out vast amounts of paperwork just to give you that "welcome to Indian bureaucracy" feeling. Cost is a little over Rs 500 including some talk time and the whole thing shouldn't take more than 10 minutes.

Activation times are entirely random. Sometimes they work off the bat, sometimes it takes a couple of days and you have to yell at customer service until it starts working.
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Old Jul 24, 2007 | 10:35 am
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You may need photographs

When I was in Delhi earlier this year, I attempted to get an Airtel SIM card. The distributor insisted he needed two passport size photographs to issue a SIM card. Of course, he neither had a digital camera, nor was there a convenient place nearby to get the pictures. He would not accept a copy of my passport either.
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Old Jul 24, 2007 | 11:39 am
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Really...I never have problems, but then again my relatives get my SIM for me !!!!
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Old Jul 24, 2007 | 11:47 am
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Originally Posted by Savage25
Remember to check whether you can still make outgoing calls 7-8 days after the activation. Airtel has twice "lost" the documentation (photocopy of passport) I submitted in order to activate the SIM card for the first time, and cut me off after 7 days until I raised hell with their area manager in the middle of the night.
Something similar had happened to me.. they kept
sending me notices.. but never disconnected the service.

Its post-paid now.. all I hate is marketing calls once in a while.
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Old Aug 1, 2007 | 5:43 pm
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Originally Posted by anaggie
Really...I never have problems, but then again my relatives get my SIM for me !!!!
Some of us like to not do anything that would not be quite legal, nor do we want to ask relatives for favors that might make them uncomfortable.
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Old Aug 1, 2007 | 10:03 pm
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I've never had a problem with local colleagues getting SIM's for me and I certainly don't see anything wrong with it.
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Old Aug 2, 2007 | 8:27 am
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Originally Posted by stimpy
I've never had a problem with local colleagues getting SIM's for me and I certainly don't see anything wrong with it.
I think, it's not legal to get a SIM card one some one else's name. This was the only thing, the Australian Govt Dr. Mohammed Haneef, who suffered in solitary confinement in an Australian jail on terrorism related charges. He also lost his work permit and his visa. DR Haneef had given his SIM card to his cousin, one of the accused in London or Glasgow bombing.
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Old Aug 2, 2007 | 10:09 am
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From what I understand about Dr. Haneef, someone in his chain of associates was a terrorist. I know for a fact that I am not a terrorist so I don't feel it is wrong for someone who is a trusted business colleague to buy me a SIM. Also we aren't hiding from the government. They can trace me back to my colleague anytime they want.

The regulation stems from people buying and selling SIM's without a chain of trust. That isn't the issue in my case.
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Old Aug 2, 2007 | 12:31 pm
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Originally Posted by stimpy
From what I understand about Dr. Haneef, someone in his chain of associates was a terrorist. I know for a fact that I am not a terrorist so I don't feel it is wrong for someone who is a trusted business colleague to buy me a SIM. Also we aren't hiding from the government. They can trace me back to my colleague anytime they want.

The regulation stems from people buying and selling SIM's without a chain of trust. That isn't the issue in my case.
I understand you are not a terrorist. But the regulation is designed to prevent terrorists from benefiting from an innocent activity, such as, having someone else buy you a SIM card. If law says you must buy your own SIM card, then you are breaking the aw if you ask some one else to buy a SIM card, especially if you are a foreign citizen.
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Old Aug 2, 2007 | 7:15 pm
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Originally Posted by Yaatri
I understand you are not a terrorist. But the regulation is designed to prevent terrorists from benefiting from an innocent activity, such as, having someone else buy you a SIM card. If law says you must buy your own SIM card, then you are breaking the aw if you ask some one else to buy a SIM card, especially if you are a foreign citizen.
Are you expert enough in Indian law to say that a national cannot buy a SIM card for a visiting foreign co-worker?
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