Mohammed Saleh bought a fake Chinese-made charger for his new iPhone after he lost the original charger this week.
A few minutes after he plugged it in and went to have a bath at his home in Abu Dhabi, the charger exploded.
“It was a big bang and the power in my flat went off. The plug was damaged and the charger was blackened and broken but the phone [was intact],” the Syrian man said.
Fake mobile phone accessories, most of which are made in China, have flooded the UAE market although they violate the country’s copyright laws.
Repeated raids on shops by law enforcers have failed to curb the sale of such products, which are much cheaper than the original items.
“Many customers prefer copy products because they are much cheaper…we tell them that they are not original and most of them have no warranty,” said Isam Ayyash, an Arab mobile phone dealer on Defence Road, the main phone market in the capital.
“Some of them have reported explosions of iPhone and BlackBerry chargers. I myself have seen such incidents three times. It has nothing to do with electric shortcircuit but it seems the iPhone is designed to reject any copy item.”