YANGON: Blackberrys and iPhones aren’t much use in Myanmar, where its only network is frequently jammed, data services are scarce, prices extortionate, lines crackly and most phones don’t roam. For decades, its telecoms industry has been a shambles.
It’s no surprise this country of 60 million people has the world’s second-lowest cellphone penetration after North Korea; SIM cards are made prohibitively pricey to prevent its tiny network from becoming overloaded, while e-mailing and web-surfing on phones is so rare it’s almost a bourgeois concept.