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Aug 1 2003 A 33 year old Dutch woman has suffered burns to
her face after her cell phone burst into flames during use. It appears that
the handset, a Nokia model had just been dropped on the floor and powered
down. The woman switched it back on and went to make a call when it suddenly
ignited.
On local television last night, a Nokia spokesperson said that the fire
had been caused by damage to the battery, but that the battery was an
inferior third party supplied model and not supplied by Nokia.
Commenting on the incident, police spokesman Eric Vermeulen said "She was
treated on site by health workers for facial burns,"
"I'm not a technical expert, but we assume it caught fire due to a short
circuit."
Earlier this year, Nokia reported that over the past months, cases have
been reported of non-original mobile phone batteries overheating in the
European, African and Asian regions, causing damage to both batteries and
Nokia phones. Nokia is currently conducting a thorough investigation of
various non-original batteries manufactured by different entities and
obtained in a number of regions. Based on the investigation conducted on the
non-original batteries that Nokia has been able to obtain, the batteries
appear to not fulfill the safety and quality requirements Nokia applies to
original Nokia batteries. It is also possible that using non-original mobile
phone chargers increase the risk of battery malfunction.
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