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  1. On 1 September 1995, the digit '9' was added to the front of mobile and pager numbers, making numbers eight digits, and on 1 March 2002, the digit '6' was added to the front of existing fixed line telephone numbers. The migration to the 8-digit numbering plan was planned to be on 2002, ahead of 2004 deadline.

  2. Within Australia, mobile phone numbers begin with 04 or 05 – the Australian national trunk code 0, plus the mobile indicator 4 or 5 – followed by eight digits. This is generally written as 04XX XXX XXX within Australia, or as +61 4XX XXX XXX for an international audience.

  3. Area codes in Afghanistan are two digits long. It is common to write phone numbers as (0xx) yyy-yyyy, where xx is the area code. The 0 prefix is for long-distance dialing from within the country. International callers should dial +93 xx yyyyyyy . Area codes for common cities are: 093 xx yyyyyyy: Afghanistan. 020 yyy yyyy: Kabul.

  4. Thus, from a Vivacell phone one must dial; 77 + 00 + Country Code (1 for North America) + Destination Code + Subscriber Number. From a beeline phone (landline or cell) one must dial: *88* + 00 + Country Code (1 for North America) + Destination Code + Subscriber Number. Calling within Armenia and Artsakh 0 + Destination Code + Subscriber Number

  5. China's mobile telephone numbers were changed from ten digits to eleven digits, with 0 added after 13x, and thus the HLR code became four-digit long to expand the capacity of the seriously fully crowded numbering plan. In 2006, 15x numbers were introduced. In late 2008, 18x and 14x (for data plans or IoT) were introduced.

  6. The local telephone numbers in Tuvalu are five digits long with no leading trunk zero to be omitted by international callers. The first two digits relate to the Tuvalu island in which is being called. [1] The remaining three digits are for the local number; however, when calling within the same island, all five digits must be dialled.

  7. As of March 2020, the penetration rate in Hong Kong was estimated at 275% over a population estimate of over 7.521 million, with 23.21 million public mobile subscriptions. [32] [33] Hong Kong's telecom regulator is the Office of the Communications Authority (OFCA).

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