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www.southgatearc.org
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Bosnia-Herzegovina to get new prefixesIn response to a request from the Ministry of Communications and Transport of Bosnia and Herzegovina in August, the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) withdrew the call sign prefix allocation T9A-T9Z for Bosnia and Herzegovina and made a new allocation, E7A-E7Z. The change was made initially on a provisional basis under authority
of the ITU Secretary-General and was confirmed According to International Amateur Radio Union (IARU) Secretary David Sumner, K1ZZ, the Ministry of Communications and Transport (BiH) held a press conference in Sarajevo on December 18 to formally announce the change. Minister Dr Bozo Ljubic explained the desirability of changing a prefix that initially was allocated during wartime and how it was now being replaced with one that has no connection to that troubled time; similar steps have been taken with regard to passports, drivers' licenses and automobile registrations, he said. Ljubic also observed that the costs associated with the change were minimal compared to the benefits. Amateur Radio station licenses bearing E7 prefixes will be issued beginning in January 2008, and the use of other prefixes will be phased out. Sumner and IARU Region 1 President Ole Garpestad, LA2RR, of Norway, were
invited to speak at the press conference. Accompanying them was IARU Region
1 Executive Committee member Nikola Percin, 9A5W, of Croatia. They expressed
congratulations and support for the change, eliminating an issue that
has complicated relations among the radio Also invited to speak was Miroslav Nikse, President of the Union of Radioamateur
Associations of Bosnia and Herzegovina (URAS), a recently formed umbrella
organization of amateur radio associations based in different parts of
the country. He thanked those involved in promoting the change. In his
remarks, Dr Ljubic pledged support from the Ministry of Communications
and Transport to the umbrella organization for the development of Amateur
Radio repeater and digital networks that would cover the whole of the
country,
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