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The New Zealand Association of Radio Transmitters Incorporated

PIRATE OPERATORS AND IMPROPERLY LICENSED STATIONS

(Revised to use updated terminology, April 2002)

All radio amateurs should read this statement issued by NZART Council on July 1, 1983:

Your responsibility as a radio amateur

As licensed radio amateurs, we organise ourselves through the New Zealand

Association of Radio Transmitters Inc. to uphold the standards of the Amateur

Service, including its present high standard of entry. We accept responsibility for

helping people who want to become radio amateurs and for protecting their interests

once they have become properly qualified.

We must seek to remove those improper and illegal practices that bring the Amateur

Service into disrepute in licensing matters, make regulatory improvement difficult and

make it extremely difficult to get support for the Amateur Service at international

conferences and cheapen the worth of your qualification and licence.

Improper and illegal practices

We are not directly concerned with stations operating outside amateur bands.

In bands allocated to the Amateur Service, pirate operators and improperly licensed

stations are operating. They are posing as amateur stations, but they fall short of our

standards in these ways:

Maritime Mobile Stations

NZART helps properly qualified radio amateurs who go to sea, and the sea-going enthusiast who wants to become a genuine radio amateur.

Genuine /MM stations are encouraged to make their activities known through IARU societies and amateur radio publications.

Unfortunately, some /MM stations using the amateur bands are illegal. The prefixes

used in the Pacific by yachtsmen suggest many improper licences. The International

Callbook does not list many callsigns or callsign-sequences used, and enquiries by

IARU societies in many countries (for example, Liberia) have shown that their

licensing administrations are concerned about these pirated call signs.

Amateur equipment is cheaper than type-approved maritime equipment. This may be

a reason for what seems to be a concerted effort in yachting circles to encourage the

trend away from the maritime service to the Amateur Service.

Action

Except in a GENUINE EMERGENCY involving safety of life when any frequency may be used, as a radio amateur you should:

Tell the New Zealand administration (The Ministry of Economic Development, Radio

Spectrum Management) about the station and tell the station that you are doing so.

Get in touch with:

Help NZART to stamp out illegal practices

Help NZART to protect your interests.

Sales of transmitting equipment

You should.

The New Zealand Administration

The New Zealand administration, the Ministry of Economic Development, Radio

Spectrum Management, fully supports NZART Council in its desire to stamp out improper practices.

The administration has inspected vessels and impounded amateur-type equipment.

The administration will continue to take action against shore-based stations that take

any part in improper practices

SPREAD THE WORD

Draw this statement on pirate operators and improperly licensed stations to the

attention of any radio amateur who has traffic with them. For this purpose you may

photocopy this statement.

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