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International telecoms: Cheaper rates for landline Zimbabwe calls

Calling family or friends in Zimbabwe in the daytime can be incredibly expensive, but not with these cheap landline calls.

If your provider has raised its prices for daytime calls to landlines in Zimbabwe, there’s a good chance another company’s rates have fallen since you last checked.

If your family or friends have moved to Zimbabwe and you’re fed up of extortionate phone bills, help is at hand with these cheap daytime landline calls.

Home Phone Choices rates the cheapest calls to Zimbabwe

If your daytime calls to landlines in Zimbabwe are too expensive, why not consider switching phone suppliers?






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 Information on Communications and Transport in Zimbabwe:

  • Zimbabwe » International Dialing code: 00 263 (note: you can ignore the double zero and just use a plus + sign before the number)
  • Zimbabwe » Airports: 404 (2004 est.) This page was last updated on 20 October, 2005
  • Zimbabwe » Airports - with paved runways: total: 17 over 3,047 m: 3 2,438 to 3,047 m: 2 1,524 to 2,437 m: 4 914 to 1,523 m: 8 (2004 est.) This page was last updated on 20 October, 2005
  • Zimbabwe » Airports - with unpaved runways: total: 387 1,524 to 2,437 m: 5 914 to 1,523 m: 186 under 914 m: 196 (2004 est.) This page was last updated on 20 October, 2005
  • Zimbabwe » Capital: Harare This page was last updated on 20 October, 2005
  • Zimbabwe » Currency (code): Zimbabwean dollar (ZWD) This page was last updated on 20 October, 2005
  • Zimbabwe » Economy - overview: The government of Zimbabwe faces a wide variety of difficult economic problems as it struggles with an unsustainable fiscal deficit, an overvalued exchange rate, soaring inflation, and bare shelves. Its 1998-2002 involvement in the war in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, for example, drained hundreds of millions of dollars from the economy. Badly needed support from the IMF has been suspended because of the country's failure to meet budgetary goals. Inflation rose from an annual rate of 32% in 1998 to 133% at the end of 2004, while the exchange rate fell from 24 Zimbabwean dollars per US dollar to 6,200 in the same time period. The government's land reform program, characterized by chaos and violence, has badly damaged the commercial farming sector, the traditional source of exports and foreign exchange and the provider of 400,000 jobs. This page was last updated on 20 October, 2005
  • Zimbabwe » Flag description: seven equal horizontal bands of green, yellow, red, black, red, yellow, and green with a white isosceles triangle edged in black with its base on the hoist side; a yellow Zimbabwe bird representing the long history of the country is superimposed on a red five-pointed star in the center of the triangle, which symbolizes peace; green symbolizes agriculture, yellow - mineral wealth, red - blood shed to achieve independence, and black stands for the native people This page was last updated on 20 October, 2005
  • Zimbabwe » Highways (km): total: 18,338 km paved: 8,692 km unpaved: 9,646 km (1999 est.) This page was last updated on 20 October, 2005
  • Zimbabwe » Internet country code: .zw This page was last updated on 20 October, 2005
  • Zimbabwe » Internet hosts: 4,501 (2003) This page was last updated on 20 October, 2005
  • Zimbabwe » Internet users: 500,000 (2002) This page was last updated on 20 October, 2005
  • Zimbabwe » Map references: Africa This page was last updated on 20 October, 2005
  • Zimbabwe » National holiday: Independence Day, 18 April (1980) This page was last updated on 20 October, 2005
  • Zimbabwe » Ports and harbors: Binga, Kariba This page was last updated on 20 October, 2005
  • Zimbabwe » Radio broadcast stations: AM 7, FM 20 (plus 17 repeater stations), shortwave 1 (1998) This page was last updated on 20 October, 2005
  • Zimbabwe » Railways (km): total: 3,077 km narrow gauge: 3,077 km 1.067-m gauge (313 km electrified) (2004) This page was last updated on 20 October, 2005
  • Zimbabwe » Telephone system: general assessment: system was once one of the best in Africa, but now suffers from poor maintenance; more than 100,000 outstanding requests for connection despite an equally large number of installed but unused main lines domestic: consists of microwave radio relay links, open-wire lines, radiotelephone communication stations, fixed wireless local loop installations, and a substantial mobile cellular network; Internet connection is available in Harare and planned for all major towns and for some of the smaller ones international: country code - 263; satellite earth stations - 2 Intelsat; two international digital gateway exchanges (in Harare and Gweru) This page was last updated on 20 October, 2005
  • Zimbabwe » Telephones - main lines in use: 300,900 (2003) This page was last updated on 20 October, 2005
  • Zimbabwe » Telephones - mobile cellular: 379,100 (2003) This page was last updated on 20 October, 2005
  • Zimbabwe » Television broadcast stations: 16 (1997) This page was last updated on 20 October, 2005
  • Zimbabwe » Waterways (km): on Lake Kariba, length small (2003) This page was last updated on 20 October, 2005