Having owned almost as many smokers as I have knives, I have a bit of insight.
I have no idea what may be available there, nor what your budget would be.
As most of them are extremely heavy, I can't imagine you would buy anything that had to be shipped special.
If your still in the I just want to try it out phase, you can smoke on most anything and get ok results. 55 gal drum smokers come to mind and are relatively inexpensive. For that matter it's not at all impossible to smoke on a kettle grill if it's large enough. After all it's simply indirect heat you are looking for. Webber also makes a smokey mountain cooker that's inexpensive and popular.
If your looking for a nice smoker that also grills there are options such as one of the kamado style cookers. These are very popular here. I have no idea if pellet fuel grills and smokers are available there, but in my opinion for the home cook who wants great taste in grilling and smoking, with minimal involvement required, these are the best option.
As someone else posted there are electric oven type smokers that you add wood chunks to a box over the element that are temp controlled.
As to cooking methods, low and slow is typically cooking between 225-275 degrees. At those temps it takes a lot longer to do a butt, or brisket, but in my opinion the result is worth it. We are talking 10-14 hours long. You can experiment with prep methods but my suggestion is to simply try some different commercially available rubs at first to see how you like the results.
Tips depending on what cooker you use. If your using one that requires charcoal managing your Fire and your smoke is the key to sucess. Being able to keep a relatively constant temp, with non acrid smoke is what delivers that true southern bbq flavor. Depending on the cooker that's going to require practice.
Then there are the offset cookers that cook with wood. Fun, expensive and difficult to master, but if you have the cash and the dedication to monitor and adjust the beast, as well as cook large quantities, these are great machines as well. Spendy buggers however. Here one worth a darn starts around 1800 and goes to well over 10,000 depending on what you buy.
Let us know what models your considering and maybe we can chime in with specific recommendations or at least things to consider.