By Nick Sinanis, callsign SV3SJ, President of the International Amateur Radio Club (IARC), and Attila Matas, callsign OM1AM, Vice-president and Station Manager, IARC
Did you know that the United Nations specialized agency for information and communication technologies owns and operates its very own radio station?
Residing at the headquarters of the International Telecommunications Union (ITU), the 60-year-old amateur station operates under the callsign 4U1ITU.
It started broadcasting on 10 June 1962 and was officially inaugurated the following month by then UN Secretary-General U Thant and ITU Secretary-General Gerald Gross – himself a ‘’ham” radio enthusiast known by the personal callsign W3GG.
Recognized as a unique “country” in the ham radio community, 4U1ITU operates in accordance with privileges extended by ITU and the Government of Switzerland. It has also earned the DXCC (or ham radio “century club”) award from the American Radio Relay League (ARRL), confirming air contacts with 100 or more countries.
From its long-time home on the 5th floor of the Varembé Building in Geneva’s international district, this unique broadcasting outlet still today serves as a model for the highest standards of amateur radio station operation everywhere.
4U1ITU’s first contact, or “QSO” in ham radio parlance, was made with a German station called DL4VK. Further QSOs followed, amounting to over 1,300 contacts worldwide in the first 24 hours.
In the six decades since, ITU’s radio station has made over a million contacts using Morse code carrier wave (CW), voice (SSB), and digital operational modes, based on more than 20,000 two-way QSOs with radio amateurs around the world.
4U1ITU can operate on most of the frequency bands allocated to amateur and amateur-satellite services as identified in Article 5 of the Radio Regulations.
Aside from letting licensed radio amateurs in ITU, its Member State representatives, and its conference and meeting delegates contact fellow radio hams, the station promotes international goodwill and cooperation across the community. It also allows hands-on demonstrations of amateur radio communications for delegates and meeting participants.
Milestone event broadcasts
ITU’s ham outlet has been especially active during each successive World Radiocommunication Conference, the key decision-making body convened every four years for the ITU Radiocommunication Sector, when the station adopts the special callsign 4U1WRC.
On ITU’s 150th anniversary, the organization’s in-house amateur radio club organized an exhibition of ham gear and made a series of broadcasts from high-profile UN and telecommunication venues with the temporary callsign 4U150ITU.
Evolving with the times
Throughout its 60-year history, 4U1ITU has kept at the forefront of ham radio’s technological evolution. During the 1960s, the station saw the advent of accessible equipment for narrowband voice and single-sideband (SSB) communications, as well as orbit predictions and tracking for the first amateur radio satellites.
In the 1970s, the station engaged in some of the first very high and ultra-high frequency (VHF/UHF) contacts using “meteor scattering” of radio waves. Then, as personal computers proliferated in the 1980s and 1990s, 4U1ITU shifted to digital communications with one of the first bulletin board systems using AX.25 packet radio.
The station marked its golden anniversary in 2012 with another first, bouncing radio waves off the Moon’s surface using a low-power transmitter and four stacked Yagi antennas, combined with WSJT, a computer program designed to support weak-signal digital communication. Nobel laureate and WSJT creator Joe Taylor, callsign K1JT, made this first contact.
Calling ISS
More recently, 4U1ITU has made several direct contacts with the International Space Station (ISS), linking ITU officials with astronauts from the US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the European Space Agency (ESA).
In 2014, radio amateur Doreen Bogdan-Martin, KD2JTX, now Director of the ITU Telecommunication Development Bureau, organized a real-time question-and-answer session with the ISS crew for space communications students at Geneva’s Institut Florimont school through 4U1ITU as part of the Amateur Radio on the International Space Station (ARISS) initiative.
SOURCE: ITU
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