andy9
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On the contrary, it appears to be you that is complaining
I successfully called my 020 0001 8xxx number in June 2005 from O2 and Orange mobiles, and from a couple of other providers. This means that they had actively defined the number series as valid in their dialplans
I've used and recommended the 02002220700 number on many occasions, as have many others, for about 3 years now, from at least half a dozen providers. T-mobile still block it, but I'm not aware of any other company doing so.
If you are that keen to be right than you gainsay all of this, and now spend a while searching and eventually come up with an potentially incorrect or irrelevant interpretation of half a sentence, then good luck ...
Phone numbers don't work at random or by chance. Companies or users define them as valid in a dialplan, or mask off those that are not, sometimes leaving a couple of glitches, like for example a temporary inability to call the newer German numbers a digit longer than previously allocated, or new UK mobile number series being unreachable from a couple of providers for a while
Dialplans can allow alternatives to be valid, such as the including leading +44 or 0044 on UK numbers, or dialling someone on the same exchange without the area code, just a 5 6 7 or 8 figure number. Even the Betamax VoIP brands allow this latter option, if you define your local (or any, even mobile) area code, which will be invisibly inserted
As I've pointed out, and so does the document you found, numbers with 0 or 1 as the first of those digits can only be used with the area code as well. But they do indeed exist, and not only in London, e.g 0186519xxxx in Oxford. Also the renumbering of some exchanges allowed possibilities such as 0117900 in Bristol or 0118300 in Reading, which could not have existed before.
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