The people of China will soon legally be able acquire the phone they have been building: the iPhone.
According to International Business Times, Unicom, China's second largest cell carrier, has paid 10 billion yuan (£885m) to buy five million iPhones from Apple.
The first batch of the phones will be made available to Chinese customers as early as September. Since March, the company has been posting the phone's images and specs at its stores.
This will be the first time the phone is legally available in the country with the largest amount of mobile-phone users in the world — despite the fact the iPhone is assembled in China.
Prior to this, the phone has been available in China, as well as Vietnam and many other countries where Apple has no business partners, via smuggling.
The phone will be locked to Unicom. Yu Zaonan, general manager of the customer development department of China Unicom in Guangzhou, told International Business Times that China Unicom is hoping five million iPhones will translate into five million new customers for the company.
Unicom currently is still far behind China Mobile, the largest cell carrier in the country, both in terms of subscribers and profit. Unicom hopes the iPhone will help it narrow this gap.
Locked phones are generally new to China and Asia, where people have had the freedom of getting any phone at any store and using it with any carrier.
It is unclear which versions of the iPhone (3G or 3GS) are included in this deal and whether the phones will have Wi-Fi disabled. However, according to Yu Zaonan, the price for the 8GB iPhone will be 2,400 yuan (£210) and the 16GB version will cost twice as much. This means the company's potential new batch of five million subscribers would be those with substantially high incomes.
Anyone not so well-off may resort to used and jailbroken iPhones smuggled in from other countries. These phones cost somewhere between 400 yuan and 1,000 yuan, according to International Business Times.






