Name Price Validity Benefits
Topup - Rs. 423.73 Talktime

500.0 Existing Pack Talktime: ₹423.73; Validity: NA.
Pack last changed 21 March 2024
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Topup - Rs. 7.47 Talktime

10.0 Existing Pack Talktime: ₹7.47; Validity: NA.
Pack last changed 21 March 2024
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Combo Topup - Rs. 5.0 Talktime

199.0 30 days Data: 3GB; Calls: Unlimited local STD & Roaming; Validity: 30 days; SMS: 300; Talktime: Rs 5. Additional Benefits: Free HellotunesHello TunesSet any song as Hellotune for Free; Enjoy Wynk MusicWynkMusic, Hellotunes and Podcasts.
Pack last changed 21 March 2024
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Topup - Rs. 4237.29 Talktime

5000.0 Existing Pack Talktime: ₹4237.29; Validity: NA.
Pack last changed 21 March 2024
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Combo Topup - Rs. 5.0 Talktime

359.0 1 Month Data: 2.5GB/Day; Calls: Unlimited local STD & Roaming; Validity: 1 month; SMS: 100/Day; Talktime: Rs 5. Additional Benefits: Airtel Xstream Play (FREE 20+ OTTs)Enjoy 28 Days FREE access to 15+ OTTs such as Sony LIV, Lionsgate Play, Fancode, Eros Now, hoichoi, ManoramaMAX, and many more on Airtel Xstream Play. Watch smashing hits on your mobile, tablet or TV.; Unlimited 5G DataUnlimited 5G Data is over and above your plan limit and can be used in 5G Network areas only; Apollo 24|7 CircleApollo3 Months, at No Cost; Free HellotunesHello TunesSet any song as Hellotune for Free; Enjoy Wynk MusicWynkMusic, Hellotunes and Podcasts.
Pack last changed 22 March 2024
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Topup - Rs. 14.95 Talktime

20.0 Existing Pack Talktime: ₹14.95; Validity: NA.
Pack last changed 21 March 2024
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Name Price Validity Benefits
Topup - Rs. 4237.29 Talktime

5000.0 Existing Pack Talktime: Rs.4237.29. Service Validity of 28 days.
Pack last changed 22 August 2023
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Combo Topup - Rs. 64.0 Talktime

79.0 28 days 2G/3G/4G Data: 200 MB. Local & STD Calls @ 1.0 p/sec. Talktime: Rs.64.0.
Pack last changed 22 August 2023
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Topup - Rs. 14.95 Talktime

20.0 Existing Pack Talktime: Rs.14.95. No Service Validity.
Pack last changed 22 August 2023
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Topup - Rs. 7.47 Talktime

10.0 Existing Pack Talktime: Rs.7.47. No Service Validity.
Pack last changed 22 August 2023
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Topup - Rs. 423.73 Talktime

500.0 Existing Pack Talktime: Rs.423.73. Service Validity of 28 days.
Pack last changed 22 August 2023
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Topup - Rs. 39.37 Talktime

50.0 Existing Pack Talktime: Rs.39.37. No Service Validity.
Pack last changed 22 August 2023
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About Gazipur

Ghazipur (Hindi: , Urdu: , previously spelled Ghazeepore, Gauspur, and Ghazipour), is a city and municipal corporation in the state of Uttar Pradesh, India. Ghazipur city is the administrative headquarters of the Ghazipur district, one of the four districts that form the Varanasi division of Uttar Pradesh. The city of Ghazipur also constitutes one of the five distinct tehsils, or subdivisions, of the Ghazipur district. Ghazipur is well known for its opium factory, established by the British East India Company in 1820 and still the biggest legal opium factory in the world, producing the drug for the global pharmaceutical industry.[1] Sights in the city include several monuments built by Nawab Shaikh Abdulla, or Abdullah Khan, a governor of Ghazipur during the Mughal Empire in the eighteenth century, and his son. These include the palace known as Chihal Satun, or "forty pillars", which retains a very impressive gateway although the palace is in ruins, and the large garden with a tank and a tomb called the Nawab-ki-Chahar-diwari.[2][3] The mosque near this tomb was probably originally a Hindu building.[4] The road that starts at the Nawab-ki-Chahar-diwari tomb and runs past the mosque leads, after 10 km, to a matha devoted to Pavhari Baba.[2] The tank and tomb of Pahar Khan, faujdar of the city in 1580, and the plain but ancient tombs of the founder, Masud, and his son are also in Ghazipur, as is the tomb of Lord Cornwallis, one of the major figures of Indian and British history.[4] Cornwallis is famous for his role in the American Revolutionary War, and then for his time as Governor-General of India, being said to have laid the true foundation of British rule. He was later Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, there suppressing the 1798 Rebellion and establishing the Act of Union. He died in Ghazipur in 1805, soon after his returning to India for his second appointment as Governor-General. His tomb, overlooking the Ganges, is a heavy dome supported on 12 Doric columns above a cenotaph carved by John Flaxman.[3] The remains of an ancient mud fort also overlook the river, while there are many beautiful or impressive ghats leading to the Ganges, the oldest of which is the ChitNath Ghat.[2][4] Ghazipur lies close to the Uttar Pradesh-Bihar border, about 80 km (50 mi) east of Varanasi and 50 km (31 mi) from Buxar, the entry point to Bihar state.