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Australia Records Another Emergency Call Death as Samsung Phone Fails

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Australia Records Another Emergency Call Death as Samsung Phone Fails
Australia Records Another Emergency Call Death as Samsung Phone Fails

The Samsung Galaxy S6 is presented during the 2015 Mobile World Congress in Barcelona on March 1, 2015. Lluis Gene/AFP/Getty Images

TPG Telecom has apologised after a Sydney customer died on Nov. 14 when their mobile phone failed to connect to Triple Zero, despite the network operating normally at the time.

The person, who was attempting to call emergency services through Lebara—one of TPG’s brands—was using an older Samsung handset later found to be incompatible with making Triple Zero calls on the carrier’s network.

TPG said it was notified of the death on Nov. 18 by New South Wales (NSW) Ambulance.

The company issued a statement expressing condolences and urging customers with outdated devices to update or replace them immediately.

“This is a tragic incident, and our condolences and thoughts are with the individual’s family and loved ones,” TPG Telecom CEO Iñaki Berroeta said. “Access to emergency services is critical. Customer safety remains our highest priority.”

Older Samsung Devices at Risk

TPG said the handset involved was among a group of Samsung models identified as requiring urgent software updates.

Without the update, the devices may fail to switch to an alternate network when attempting to place an emergency call—a process known as “Triple Zero fallback.”

Although the network was fully operational on Nov. 14, early investigations suggest the Samsung software on the customer’s phone did not allow the call to complete.

The issue, first detected by Telstra and Optus in late October, affects several older Samsung models, including the Galaxy S6 and S7 series, the Note 5, and multiple mid-range J-series devices.

TPG said it had contacted all customers with affected devices as early as October and again on Nov. 7, warning them to perform the required software updates.

Under new federal rules, any device that remains unpatched after 28–35 days must be blocked to prevent potential emergency-call failures.

Other telcos, including Optus and Telstra, have begun blocking the same models to reduce the risk of further incidents.

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