Reported by BBC
Samsung Galaxy Note 7
Samsung has said it will delay
restarting the sale of its Galaxy Note 7 phone in South Korea, as the
firm needs more time for the global recall of the device.
The South Korean tech giant was forced to recall some 2.5 million devices globally due to overheating batteries.
Dozens of devices were reported to have caught fire.
The phone was to be back on the shelf on 28 September but is now expected to be available 1 October at the earliest.
On
2 September Samsung had said it would stop selling the phones and
offered to replace the ones already sold. The firm also urged people to stop using the device.
The
global recall affects 10 markets. In South Korea, some 200,000
customers have already returned their devices with the same number of
people still left for the recall, according to Samsung.
Reuters
reported that the next markets where the phone will be available for
sale again will be Australia and Singapore in October.
On Friday, cabin crew on an Indian passenger aircraft used a fire extinguisher to tackle a smoking older Samsung handset.
The
Galaxy Note 2 - a model launched in 2012 - was smouldering and spitting
sparks, according to a statement from airline IndiGo.
In the US, regulators have ordered a formal recall of the Note 7, while the country's Federal Aviation Administration
has told airline passengers not to bring the phones on planes unless
they keep them turned off and don't charge them during the flight.
A number of airlines around the globe have also banned the phone from being used or charged on their planes.
The phone was originally launched on 19 August and had been generally well-received by critics and consumers.
The recall comes at a crucial time for Samsung as rival Apple has just released its new iPhone 7.
Culled from: http://www.bbc.com/news/business-37469340
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