The Voice (Botswana)

Is my phone new?

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I bought my iphone XR from a store; they claimed it’s a new phone but the battery health wasn’t 100%, also the model number - according to Apple community - is a refurbishe­d phone.

A month into using the phone, it kept crashing. I had to send it back to them and they claimed it needed a software update, which wasn’t true because I had already updated it. It also came with a damaged box and no charger. They gave me a separate charger with the claim that the phone doesn’t come with a charger, rather it’s sold separately.

And they informed me that a cellphone shop at Square Mart was their supplier, and the supplier was not willing to assist with the query. They claimed that it has been 8 months with the phone. I showed them the complaint I sent them about the phone being refurbishe­d in January, hardly 3 weeks after buying it, so they are the ones who didn’t escalate my issue well on time with their supplier, and that isn’t my problem. So I told them I still demand a new phone and not a refurbishm­ent. They said they’ll call you so you help them hold their supplier responsibl­e.

I think this store needs to learn a few very simple lessons.

Firstly, selling a refurbishe­d phone as new is illegal, contrary to Section 13 (1) of the Consumer Protection Act, which says that a supplier must “inform a consumer that the goods sold are used goods by … placing a label on the goods that indicates that such goods are used goods (and) placing a notice on the invoice issued to a consumer”.

Secondly, do they really think consumers can’t identify a refurbishe­d iphone when they see it? It’s simple. If you check the model number of an iphone, the first letter describes its origin. If it starts with M it’s new, F means refurbishe­d and N, like in your case, means it was a replacemen­t phone. Someone in the world returned their new iphone to an Apple store and it was replaced with the phone you now have. And guess what? Most replacemen­t phones have been refurbishe­d.

Next, like you, I really don’t care about their relationsh­ip with their supplier. That’s their problem, not yours.

And, finally, they don’t get to tell me

what to do. I’m not getting involved in any arguments with their supplier. They need to honour their obligation­s to you and to the law. Quickly.

Update: I contacted them and they said they’ll contact you and see how best they can assist you.

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