Slashdot Mirror


Major US Carriers Open Free Calls And Texts To Brussels (androidheadlines.com)

An anonymous reader quotes from a report on AndroidHeadlines: Following the attacks at Brussels International Airport and the Maelbeek Subway Station in Brussels, Belgium earlier this morning, all four major U.S. carriers have announced that they will be offering their customers the opportunity to make free calls to Brussels, as a means of letting customers keep in contact with friends and loved ones who live or are traveling within the city, a gesture which both Verizon and Sprint offered to customers last year following the attacks in Paris, France. As the city of Brussels begins and continues to mourn in the wake of the attacks, Sprint, T-Mobile, ATT, and Verizon Wireless will all offer free calls and texts to Brussels from the U.S., beginning today and lasting throughout the next few days to a week.

3 of 58 comments (clear)

  1. Just Brussels? by guruevi · · Score: 3, Informative

    Brussels is not a country (as some Americans think) but a city. Not sure how they differentiate calls to 'Brussels' (old area code 02) from calls to Belgium (+32) since 'area codes' there have been portable for at least a decade and most of them are on mobile phones (area code 04).

    --
    Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    1. Re:Just Brussels? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      My wife is a high school teacher in Brussels, College Saint Pierre (Jette). Every yearI go to her classes once sobthe kids can hear a native English speaker. The exercise I do is to have the kids fill out a questionaire. Almost never do they know the country with the largest English speaking population (it's India, but the most popular answer is always England). Every year some cannot place the US on the map.

      They are graduating students in their last year. I think Europeans like you overestimate the quality of your education system.

  2. Meanwhile in Brussels ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

    ...people are encouraged to minimize (cell)phone usage because the networks are overloaded.