Published: Jan. 3, 2009 at 2:37 PM
HAVANA, Jan. 3 (UPI) -- Cell phones have become the new rage in Cuba 
though users say they don't actually talk on them -- they use them as 
pagers.
The Castro government began allowing cell phone purchases last April, 
but the cost of using them is more than most citizens of the communist 
island nation can afford, The Washington Post (NYSE:WPO) reported Saturday.
When a cell phone rings, many Cuban users look at the number and then 
return the call on land-line telephones, which are plentiful and cheap, 
or they type a message back, said Vladimiro Perez, a bartender in Old 
Havana. "We just type," said Perez. "No talk."
Cubans can now own cell phones, DVD players, microwave ovens and 
computers, but most can't afford them, the Post reported.
Text messages in Cuba cost 17 cents each, while local calls between cell 
phones cost 65 cents a minute, the Post reported, noting there are an 
estimated 250,000 cell phone users in Cuba, which has 11.2 million 
people with an average income each of about $20 per month.
http://www.upi.com/Top_News/2009/01/03/Cell_phones_are_new_Cuban_status_symbol/UPI-58281231011450/
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