The Federal District-based consumer protection regulator in Brazil has seized hundreds of iPhones from retail stores across the country.
As first reported by Tecnoblog, the seizures are a part of Brazil's “Operation Discharge,” through which the federal regulator aims to force Apple to comply with a local law that requires smartphones to be shipped with the charger included in the box.
According to the report, iPhones were seized from consignment stores and authorised Apple resellers.
The regulator has ordered a ban on any iPhone model without a charger included in the box.
Although Apple stopped shipping the charger for free with the iPhone 12, the company also updated the iPhone 11 with a new case without a charger.
After the seizure of iPhones, Apple Brazil asked the government to allow the sale of phones in the country until the final decision of its court of appeal.
The company told Tecnoblog that it continues to sell iPhones in Brazil despite the agreement.
According to MacMagazine, Judge Diego Câmara Alves, believes Apple is not violating any consumer rights and allowed it to sell iPhones until the final decision was taken.
Apple says it is confident it will win the case and that consumers "know different options for charging and connecting their devices."
Global equity markets, including from the U.S., Europe and Asia, rose while oil prices fell on Wednesday, as traders cheered news of ceasefire proposals to de-escalate the ongoing conflict in the Middle East.
Australia's centre-left government has introduced legislation in the parliament to double penalties for fuel price gouging on Wednesday as global supply disruptions due to the Iran war triggered fuel shortages in some rural regions.
Gulf markets ended mixed on Tuesday, with Qatar extending losses while other bourses steadied as investors parsed conflicting signals on potential US-Iran talks.
Australia and the European Union on Tuesday signed a trade deal marking the culmination of years of negotiations, as Europe seeks to diversify its export markets and expand ties beyond its traditional partners.
Weaponising the Strait of Hormuz is an act of economic terrorism with global impact far beyond energy markets, asserted Dr. Sultan bin Ahmed Al Jaber, Minister of Industry and Advanced Technology, while addressing CERAWeek in Houston, Texas.
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