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4th & 5th Plenary Meetings (AM & PM): 12
December 2003 WORLD SUMMIT ON
INFORMATION SOCIETY CONCLUDES GENERAL DEBATE
Speakers Underscore Need to Bridge Digital
Divide
And Spread ICTs through Means Like Digital
Solidarity Fund
The World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) today
concluded its general debate, hearing from 52 speakers who,
among other things, stressed the need to bridge the digital
divide and spread information and communication technologies (ICTs)
in developing countries through means like the proposed
Digital Solidarity Fund.
The main topic of concern to many speakers was the current
extent of the digital divide. Some expressed hope that it
would not continue to grow, but instead would be bridged
finally and fruitfully, bringing equal opportunity of access
to all. The urgency of the situation was notably stressed.
Malaysia in particular supported the inclusion of a digital
solidarity agenda within the Declaration of Principles which
will be adopted later today. Indonesia, for its part, noted
that the readiness of the developed countries and of the
international financial institutions to assist developing
countries in this field would determine the fulfillment of the
Millennium Declaration.
The use of ICTs to encourage and enhance sustainable
development was also an issue of vital importance to many
speakers, particularly from developing countries, many of whom
pointed out their need for solidarity in this respect from the
developed nations. Information and communication technologies,
said Jamaica, were not just about stimulating a rise in
national gross domestic product (GDP), but were a way of life,
a perception that was supported by Singapore, who spoke of the
profound impact they had on many tangible and intangible
issues related to daily existence.
Among other topics raised was the issue of security,
including evils such as cyber-crime, infringement of privacy,
dissemination of indecent material and spam. Speakers also
raised the need to ensure that the Internet respected,
preserved and promoted national, regional and local cultural
identities, thus empowering them within the globalized world;
the difficulty of integrating a population that lacked even
basic telecommunication services into a knowledge-based
society; and the need for an intense level of communication
and partnership between governments, business and civil
society in order to ensure a situation where each and every
country could take in hand its own future and destiny.
Addressing the Summit during the plenary were Ministers
from Mongolia, Brunei Darussalam, Thailand, Jamaica, Mexico,
Malaysia, Singapore, Madagascar, Angola, Colombia, Indonesia,
Barbados, Iraq, Republic of Korea, Burkina Faso, Monaco, Peru,
Bulgaria, New Zealand, Cambodia, Trinidad and Tobago, Fiji,
Republic of Congo, United Republic of Tanzania, Sudan,
Burundi, Yemen, and Timor-Leste. Also speaking were the heads
of delegation of Malta, Canada, United Kingdom, Venezuela,
Georgia, Bolivia, Belize, Israel and Costa Rica. Further, the
representatives of the Community of Portuguese Speaking
Countries, the Sovereign Military Order of Malta, the United
States Virgin Islands and the United Nations Fund for
International Partnerships addressed the Summit.
Representatives of civil society, the business sector and
United Nations organizations also spoke, including the United
Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), the World Federation of
Engineering Organizations, Talal Abu-Ghazaleh & Co.
International, the United Nations Economic Commission for
Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC), the United Nations
Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues, CrimsonLogic, Rede de
Informações para o Terceiro Setor, Axalto, CRIS Campaign, the
World Intellectual Property Organization, and the World
Meteorological Organization.
Following these declarations, the Summit heard reports from
the Multi-Stakeholder Events. Representatives of these events
included Switzerland, ICT4D Platform, ICT4D Forum, World
Electronic Media Forum (WEMF), Cities and Local Authorities in
the IS, ITU High-Level Dialogue and related events, CCBI
Events, UNESCO High-Level Symposium and Round Tables, WSIS
Gender Caucus Events Programme, The Role of Science in the
Information Society, Global Forum on Disability in the IS,
Global School Networks Alliance, Conference on Volunteering
and Capacity Building in the IS, Youth Declaration from
Telecom, Mednet 2003: Internet Health for All, Global Forum of
Indigenous People in the Information Society, Youth Day,
International Trade Centre Workshops - The Changing
Marketplace: Putting "e" to work, Scientific Information and
PCT Working Groups – Round Tables and Panels, Executive Round
Tables: Taking Responsibility in the Information Age, and WSIS-ONLINE
Networkshop.
The Summit is scheduled to adopt its draft Declaration of
Principle and Plan of Action later this afternoon before it
concludes its work. The second part of the Summit will be held
in Tunis in November 2005.
Statements
SANJBEGZ TUMUR-OCHIR, Speaker of the Parliament
of Mongolia, said that the main purpose of the World
Summit on the Information Society lay not only in giving added
impetus to governments’ efforts that had already gained
increasing momentum, but also in drawing the attention of the
international community to the widening digital divide among
regions and countries, supporting developing countries,
particularly their civil society and private sector, in using
information and communication technologies (ICTs) as an engine
of growth and development. He believed that it was of
particular importance that this Summit upheld the right of
every individual to the freedom of opinion and expression and
confirmed that this right included freedom to hold opinions
without interference and to seek, receive and impart
information and ideas through any media, regardless of
frontiers.
Mr. Tumur-Ochir strongly supported the position that ICTs
were a powerful tool that could be used to further development
efforts, especially the goals to reduce extreme poverty,
provide basic education, and improve health care, decrease
gender inequality, and increase global partnership and
cooperation. The potential that ICTs created presented the
most productive means of development for landlocked developing
countries, least developed countries, small island developing
States and countries with economies in transition. However,
affordable and widely available access to ICT infrastructure
and services remained a challenge facing developing countries
in building the information society. Therefore, capital and
human capacity-building, as well as sources of financing for
the provision of assistance, needed to be addressed in a very
constructive manner.
PEHIN DATO HAJI ZAKARIA HAJI SULAIMAN, Minister
of Communications of Brunei Darussalam, said the global
info-telecommunications industry had undergone profound
changes during recent years. Continued rapid growth of the
Internet and the creation and development of applications
attached to its use had resulted in a corresponding increase
in IP access and in IP backbone networks. The Internet was the
future, one that would shape how the Information Society and
indeed future society would look like.
The Minister said that in working towards creating an
information society, there was an urgent need to address some
important issues which were of great concern: positive use of
the Internet; the International Charging Arrangement for
Internet Connection; and Network Security. The establishment
of a true information society in which people benefited
without discrimination required broad collaboration and
cooperation, and Brunei Darussalam was convinced this could be
achieved.
SURAPONG SUEBWONGLEE, Minister of Information and
Communications Technology of Thailand, said that, as his
country emerged from the economic crisis of the 1990s, it had
begun a new era of economic recovery and progress. The
Government had implemented new policies on social and economic
development for self-sufficiency with the goal of long-term
sustainability for future prosperity of all citizens. Thailand
was committed to bridging the digital and knowledge divide in
the society with the implementation of an ICT master plan for
2002 to 2006. Eighty per cent of secondary schools now had
free dial-up Internet access through the school-net project.
Mr. Suebwonglee said Thailand had set up three "ICT cities"
in each corner of the country to serve as the nucleus of an
academic, industrial and social cluster, which would be the
blueprint of tomorrow’s e-society. Cellular telephony was
another effective venue for extending ICT reach. The use of
mobile services by Thai citizens was increasing at a rapid
rate with the expansion of mobile phones in the country.
PHILLIP PAULWELL, Minister of Science, Commerce
and Technology of Jamaica, said the official documents of
the Summit -- the Declaration of Principles and attendant Plan
of Action -- were the result of meticulous and painstaking
work and consultations between and among communities on both
sides of the digital divide -- information rich and poor
nations. The documents before the Summit for adoption
reflected the views of governments and non-governmental
organizations (NGOs), the private sector, numerous civil
society groups, and the future building and custodians of the
information society -- the youth. When speaking about using
information technology for development, it was not just about
stimulating a rise in national gross domestic product (GDP),
but about embracing information and communication technologies
as a way of life.
Mr. Paulwell said that, while it was accepted that
providing technology connectivity and public access were "all
important" first steps, it was also important to demonstrate
that the work did not end there. Beyond technological
infrastructure, the basic premises of the information society
rested on the capacity of users to optimize the use of content
to meet their needs. The intrinsic link between technology and
content must be maintained in order to develop and empower
individuals and communities in the sense of a real power to
communicate, using their language, their cultural symbols,
their imagination and enriching their lives in the information
society. Jamaica was committed to e-commerce and e-government,
and, as a result, the Government had developed an electronic
transaction policy and enabling legislation. The Government’s
objective was to ensure that Jamaica became and active player
in the global information society in the belief that an
appropriate ICT policy would generate new products, new
production processes, and new forms of organization and
competitiveness.
PEDRO CERISOLA Y WEBER, Minister of
Communications and Transportation of Mexico, said reducing
the digital divide and integrating countries into the
information society was a task of which all were convinced and
committed to; however, a fact that demanded attention and
should be a cause for reflection was that the results so far
achieved were different in each country, even if a majority
had shared common public policy elements for several years,
including active participation in globalization, the
privatization of State enterprises, and the opening of
internal markets to free competition. However, globalization,
privatization and liberalization would only be able to show
all their potential as long as they could represent
substantial improvements of the living conditions of all
inhabitants, in particular, the poorest.
There were, therefore, differences in the rhythms of
adoption, adaptation and technology development that each
country could undertake, without forgetting the role that
governments should play, the Mexican Minister said. It was
clear that in countries in which there was not yet full
coverage of general telecommunication and basic telephone
services, the market forces would not cover the underserved
areas, for the simple reason that there was no market where
there was no purchasing power. The international community
could not ignore the reality that the majority of the
population that would integrate the information society was
located precisely where there was still the need to create
basic infrastructure. Policies needed to be designed not in
function of how they would be implemented in an ideal world,
but in the real world.
DATUK AMAR LEO MOGGIE, Minister of Energy,
Communications and Multimedia of Malaysia, said the
Declaration of Principles and the Plan of Action, which would
be adopted by the Summit, would give significant focus on the
issues of bridging the digital divide. Malaysia fully
supported the inclusion in the Declaration of the digital
solidarity agenda aimed at bridging the digital gap by
promoting access to ICTs. The high cost of ICT services,
including software and hardware, constituted a major
impediment to the global efforts to lessen the digital divide.
The recent International Telecommunication Union (ITU) Digital
Access Index had confirmed that there was an interdependent
correlation between ICT costs and the levels of development.
Countries with the lowest level of telephone and Internet
usage had the highest ICT costs. Global efforts should be
intensified to ensure that the cost of ICT products and
services was affordable.
While the value of intellectual property was recognized, it
needed to be balanced by the reality of social responsibility,
the Malaysian Minister said. As an option to reduce
dependency, the idea of using open-source software needs to be
exploited and evaluated. Besides cost competitiveness, the use
of open-source software could also complement efforts in
capacity building and development of local content in line
with the commitment to cultural diversity.
LEE BOON YANG, Minister for Information,
Communications and the Arts of Singapore, said rapid
advances in information and communication technologies had
empowered groups and individuals to transcend boundaries and
connect directly with their counterparts across the world.
However, there were concerns that these positive impacts might
not be evenly distributed. It was clear that the information
revolution had a profound impact on tangible and intangible
issues such as economic competitiveness, culture, social
values and life-styles. It was also clear that the trend was
irreversible. It was, therefore, incumbent upon governments to
ensure that people were able to benefit from the ICT
revolution. In a globalized information society where existing
patterns and boundaries of national and cross-border
interaction were constantly being redefined, it was important
to find ways to manage these changes.
Governments might differ in their approaches and responses
to such changes; however diversity was not necessarily a bad
thing, the Singaporean Minister said. It was by listening to
others that one was able to engage in thorough discussion and
formulate consensus on responses, he said. The Summit had
provided the international community with an opportunity to do
just that. Tunis would provide another opportunity to build on
the success of this Summit and expand the common ground for
collaboration in a global information society. Singapore’s
emphasis on ICT development mirrored that of other countries
in the South-East Asia region. Together with partners of the
Association of South-East Asian Nations (ASEAN), Singapore had
shared experiences and worked on mutually beneficial projects
to help members to bridge the digital divide and tap the
growth of digital opportunities. The Government was a leader
in the use of ICTs and many public services were offered
through an e-government network. While Singapore had made
progress towards an information society, there were still
challenges ahead. These included enhancing access to
multilingual content, ensuring that the young and old alike
had meaningful access to ICTs, bringing broadband to more
people, sharpening information technology skills for the
workforce, keeping workers updated with the latest
technological advancements, and managing competition in a fast
converging ICT sector.
HAJA NIRINA RAZAFINJATOVO, Minister of
Telecommunications, Posts and Communication of Madagascar,
said the vision of the information society of Madagascar was
of a society where the fundamental needs of families were
satisfied, where the population moved in a land where natural
resources were better managed, where financial resources were
allocated in order to permit each citizen to acquire or
reinforce his or her knowledge and thus increase revenue, and
where the partnership between the Government, the private
sector and civil society was frank and solidly based, in order
to ensure that interactions between the economic, political,
cultural and social sectors were always to the benefit of the
citizen. The keys which caused interaction, harmonized and
made this society progress were information, education,
participation, security, good governance, and the mastering of
financial resources.
Mr. Razafinjatovo noted that, at the international level,
the implementation of this information society should increase
to a greater extent the sharing of information, knowledge and
the products derived wherefrom; reinforce further the
fundamental freedom of expression of the individual while
searching for a just balance in order to fight against
illegal, dangerous or violent content; preserve cultural and
linguistic diversity; favourize exchanges between linguistic
and cultural spaces and between countries of differing levels
of development; and develop abilities so that each and every
country could truly take in hand their own future without
becoming dependent.
LICINIO TAVARES TIBEIRO, Minister of Posts and
Telecommunications of Angola, said that Angola, after
having experienced a decades-long military conflict that had
devastated the country, was now traversing an avenue leading
to peace and reconciliation. Government institutions were
functioning normally. At last, the country was now living in
peace. Programmes had been designed to generate development
programmes and to reunite families dispersed by the war. A
programme of national reconciliation had also been put in
place, together with plans to cultivate a culture of
non-violence, love and respect for others. The Government of
Angola had taken a strong commitment to implement a programme
of national reconciliation and to strengthen the prevailing
peace in the country.
In order to attain the objectives of information and
communication technologies, Angola had to make more efforts,
Mr. Tibeiro said. However, the digital divide which did not
favour the developing countries was still separating them from
the rest of the world. The developed countries should make
more efforts to assist the developing countries to realize the
necessary infrastructure for ICTs. The efforts to bridge the
digital divide in the developing countries should be carried
out in a transparent manner. The linguistic and cultural
diversities of the developing countries should be respected in
the course of ICT development.
MARTHA PINTO DE HART, Minister of Communications
of Colombia, said that leaders had met to breathe life
into a new social contract based on providing opportunities
for all citizens of the world. There could be no doubt that
information and communication technologies were one of the
best means of achieving sustainable solutions for economic
development and eliminating social and economic problems. The
international community must, therefore, make the advantages
and benefits of ICTs and the information society its priority.
Governments had a responsibility to take charge of the
creation of an inclusive information society. It would not be
acceptable to allow citizens to foot the bill for the
information society. Governments also had a responsibility to
remove existing barriers to the access and use of ICTs such as
excessive costs and restrictions of mobility. There were
currently many restrictions on the mobility of persons and
entrepreneurs. People who had the necessary skills were often
not able to become part of the information society due to such
restrictions.
In Colombia, the Government was currently focusing most of
its attention in this field on providing access to ICTs,
removing barriers, developing skills for ICTs, and increasing
the motivation of ICT users through the provision of
meaningful content in Spanish. In addition, the Government had
initiated several projects geared towards the education
sector, the Colombian Minister said. She stressed that new
policies must also embrace world problems that had worsened
due to ICTs, such as cyber-crime, terrorism and
drug-trafficking. Criminals often made use of the most modern
technologies to commit their crimes, and the international
community must, therefore, cooperate to fight organized crime.
In conclusion, she stressed that ICTs must be managed,
equitable and just.
SYAMSUL MU'ARIF, Minister for Communication and
Information of Indonesia, said there was concern at the
growing digital divide, as the pace of technological
innovation had clearly favoured the inhabitants of the
industrialized countries who had been enjoying the full
benefits of the information society since the end of the
twentieth century, while, in stark contrast, the vast majority
of the developing countries had lagged behind, with
telecommunications still regarded as a luxury only available
to a privileged few. There was trust in the power of
information and communication technologies to boost economic,
social and cultural development in the attainment of
sustainable development. They could also facilitate efforts to
fight against poverty and promote equality and gender
empowerment. Bridging this digital divide was, therefore, of
crucial importance, and, on this basis, immediate and concrete
measures across the board should imperatively be enacted to
develop digital opportunities and to make ICTs an essential
aspect of development in all sectors. These efforts should,
however, respect the reality of cultural, linguistic,
traditional and religious diversity in such a way as to make
ICTs an instrument of dialogue between cultures and
civilizations.
Industrialized countries should be persuaded to agree to a
transfer of technology, a concept which had yet to move beyond
a set of hollow political promises and into effective
implementation in this regard. Mr. Mu’arif said the readiness
of the developed countries and of the international financial
institutions to assist developing countries would determine
the fulfilment of the Millennium Declaration. The building of
a global information society required international consensus
and cooperation, and the participation of all stakeholders was
instrumental in giving people access to the well informed
society to which they aspired.
LYNETTE EASTMOND, Minister of Commerce, Consumer
Affairs and Business Development of Barbados, said her
country believed that the possibility of participation by all
States in matters that affected their economic survival or
prosperity was the only credible approach that would ensure
transparency, non-discrimination, equity and effective
implementation. It was, therefore, critical for Barbados that
ICT issues were being managed through a multilateral process
under the auspices of the United Nations. Barbados would
continue to be vigilant to ensure that the framework and
structure that evolved, especially in the establishment of
standards for ICTs, would continue to recognize the right of
participation by all States. It was unfortunate that
government policy aimed at reducing the cost of ICTs to the
general population was often frustrated by distributive
policies of major transnational ICT companies and the
restrictive legislative of developed countries that added many
layers of cost to consumers.
Barbados recognized and appreciated the assistance
programmes offered to developing countries. However, for those
programmes to be truly effective, the question of ease of
access and relevance of those programmes should be evaluated.
Similarly, there should be a commitment from the donor
countries to develop enhanced and more relevant programmes to
support the infrastructural development of developing
countries’ human and technological capacities.
HAIDER AL ABADI, Minister of Communication of
Iraq, said his country was on the eve of a new era and
information and communication technologies, which were a means
for the country to become both modern and civilized.
Information was a human right that Iraq had been deprived of
by a totalitarian regime in an attempt to control the
population. Iraqi society had, therefore, lost valuable time
in terms of progress in ICTs. An exchange of information and
knowledge between countries was today a characteristic of the
modern world. In this connection, ICTs were important in order
to ensure such an exchange. Iraq was now trying to acquire the
knowledge that the people of Iraq had been deprived of and, at
present, the authorities were paving the way towards this
goal. The new Iraq, now building its ICT infrastructure, was
reaching out its hands to all peoples and States so that
efforts could be made to ensure that Iraq took its place among
other States.
Mr. Al Abadi said that telephone coverage in Iraq stood at
4 per cent and that cell phones did not exist. It was hoped
that these percentages would increase shortly. The Internet
coverage was limited in the country, with less than 1 per cent
of the population. Plans were now under way to ensure that the
entire population had access to the Internet. In addition,
three companies would soon be operating cell phone coverage in
Iraq. He hoped that more than two thirds of the territory
would be covered soon. Plans were also under way for the
building up of basic telecommunications infrastructure in the
country. In conclusion, he said that Iraq still had the
necessary human and intellectual capabilities to join the
family of States and the information revolution age on an
equal footing. Iraq would surprise the world, he said.
CHIN DAEJE, Minister of Information and
Communication of the Republic of Korea, said the rapid
development of information and communication technologies was
not only bringing great changes in the economy and society,
but had also had a strong impact on the very life-style of
people worldwide. Although the extent of these changes could
vary from country to country, the wind of change was certainly
being felt across the entire planet. At this juncture, it was
highly meaningful to hold global discussions on digital
opportunities and the challenges ahead, which would greatly
help people in this generation and future generations.
In Korea’s journey towards the information society, the
global digital divide was proving a serious impediment to
development, Mr. Chin went on. It was believed that the gap
between the technology-enabled and technology-deprived should
be overcome through regional and international cooperation
through international organizations such as the International
Telecommunications Union (ITU). In the creation of a global
information society, there was a need to strengthen collective
efforts to span the digital bridge; to work together to tackle
harmful effects such as cyber-crime, infringement of privacy,
dissemination of indecent material and spam; and to create an
international environment that fitted well with the nature of
the information society.
SEYDOU BOUDA, Minister of Economy and Development
of Burkina Faso, said that for countries such as
his, the magnitude of the problems to overcome, in order to
mobilize the potential for information and communication
technologies, were multiple and multifaceted. The problems
were linked to technologies and the inadequacy in
infrastructure. They could also be cultural considerations
attributed to language and lack of training of the population.
The majority of the population of Burkina Faso inhabited rural
areas far away from communication facilities or from the
possibility to have access to the Internet in their own mother
tongue. If nothing was done to change that situation, the
unequal access to the development capacity provided by those
technologies would only increase economic and social
exclusion.
In order to rectify the risk of marginalization of the poor
countries, Mr. Bouba went on, it was urgent to ensure more
fairness through digital solidarity. He said building the
information society could only become a reality if the
international community defined the ways and means to
transform the digital divide into digital opportunity and
create digital solidarity based on mutual interest.
JEAN PASTORELLI, Permanent Representative of
Monaco, said the Summit was one of the great meetings to
master the evolution of the future. The Summit would ensure
that technological progress would remain within the control of
man. In addition, the Summit marked the convergence between
States and civil society. Being held in two phases, in Geneva
and in Tunis in 2005, the Summit established a symbolic link
between North and South. Broadly speaking, Monaco supported
the guidelines contained in the Declaration of Principles to
be adopted later today. The international community, through
this Declaration, must struggle against the digital divide and
ensure global access to and benefit from information and
communications technologies. Furthermore, States must ensure
that space was provided for cultural and linguistic diversity
within the information society. It was also important to
ensure that all sectors of society were considered within the
information society, including the most vulnerable groups. In
conclusion, the information society must also be based on the
continuous struggle for peace and the better understanding
between peoples.
EDUARDO IRIARTE JIMENEZ, Minister of Transport
and Communication of Peru, said information and
communication technologies were the very basis for the
construction of the new world economy based on knowledge, and
the technologies were the starting point for a new type of
organization and production on a world scale that redefined
how countries interacted. This was an opportunity to overcome
underdevelopment and implied a new risk if there was not
access for all accompanied by political support. The State
should play an active role in this area through the
encouragement of decentralization, e-government, and rural
telecommunication programmes. Civil society, the business
sector and academia should be also encouraged to participate.
Globalization had encouraged economic growth and
development which would hopefully allow the eradication of
some poverty in the twenty-first century; however, there were
a number of imbalances and frustrations which affected the
most vulnerable. Peru was convinced that ICTs were useful
tools which could and should be used in order to achieve
social and economic development goals, and the link between
their dissemination and the overcoming of poverty should be
recognized further. The goals of the Millennium Declaration
depended upon the wide-spread use of ICTs and the free
dissemination of ideas and information thereon. The goal of
universal access and freedom to information should be ensured,
while respecting cultural diversity within the information
society.
IGOR DAMIANOV, Minister of Education and Science
of Bulgaria, said developing countries had made
significant progress in building their information
infrastructure during the 1990s. However, there were still
substantial differences between the developed and the
developing countries. While the gap in fixed and mobile
communications had narrowed, the digital divide in the
construction of highway networks and providing electronic
services to citizens and businesses grew wider both between
the different countries and between the urban and the rural
areas. The Summit had to define the framework for building a
global information society for all. Bulgaria shared the vision
contained in the Draft Declaration of Principles to build a
people-centred, inclusive and development-oriented information
society premised on the principles enshrined in the United
Nations Charter and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
Information and communication technologies were among the
major priorities of the Bulgarian Government. It was
considering providing access to information society services
to all the population. The success of the Bulgarian Government
policy in the field of telecommunications and information
technologies was demonstrated by the remarkable 35 per cent
growth of the ICT sector during the last two years. Over 90
per cent of government institutions had Web sites with
interactive access.
DAVID CUNLIFFE, Associate Minister for
Communications and Information Technology of New Zealand,
said that historically, New Zealand had quickly adopted new
technologies. According to research by the Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the country had
the highest per capita expenditure on information and
communication technologies in terms of percentage of GDP in
the world. However, it was questionable whether the country
was making the best possible use of what these technologies
had to offer. The Government was, therefore, developing
strategies to ensure that ICTs contributed fully to informing
the society, to the education of children, to the training and
skill levels of the working population, to the strengthening
of scientific research and development, and to economic
productivity. A number of initiatives had been taken to deepen
and broaden the reach of broadband throughout the country,
especially in the more remote and rural areas. Plans provided
for all schools and their surrounding communities to be able
to access broadband by the end of 2004.
Among strategies developed to preserve past and future
cultural heritage, the Government was developing a system of
digital archiving to provide universal electronic access among
libraries, archives and museums. The aim was to provide access
to digital information for New Zealanders, especially online
New Zealand content, to collect digital resources, and to
ensure long-term storage and preservation of New Zealand’s
online heritage.
LAR NARATH, Under-Secretary of Posts and
Telecommunications of Cambodia, said it had been 10 years
since the United Nations had helped Cambodia to attain peace
after many wars over the previous two decades. After a long
war period with much destruction, the country had many
important priorities on its agenda. Telecommunications and
information technology were part of a sector for development
for which there was no particular pride, as it had not been
approached correctly from the start. But despite its slow
growth, there was improvement in the business and social
environment of Cambodia. The challenge faced now was how to
make the telecommunications and information technology
services available in remote and rural sectors.
Mr. Narath said the economic and social situation in
Cambodia had improved significantly due partly to the
availability of telecommunications and information technology
infrastructures and services, which had played an important
role in the growth and sustainability of the economic and
social well-being of the country. Continuing efforts were
being put into perpetuating this improvement, and Cambodia was
hopeful that more assistance would be accorded by friendly and
wealthier countries.
BERNARD WESTON, Head of the Delegation of
Trinidad and Tobago, announced that his country would
formally launch the Trinidad and Tobago National ICT Strategic
Plan next Monday, 15 December. The Plan would serve as a
roadmap for the empowering of people, innovation, education,
information technology and infrastructure, to create an
enabling environment that would accelerate social, economic
and cultural development. Trinidad and Tobago, a small island
developing State with a land area of just over 5,000 square
kilometres and a population of 1.3 million, was, however,
internationally renowned for its cultural and ethnic
diversity.
The ability of the World Summit to promote the principles
enshrined in the Millennium Declaration and thereby to
effectively address such challenging issues as the need to
achieve a gender equality perspective; take into account the
special needs of older persons and persons with disabilities;
and to effectively bring information and communication
technologies to bear on the issues of poverty eradication and
employment creation, would ultimately be the benchmark by
which the success of the Summit’s deliberations would be
judged.
MICHAEL FRENDO, Head of the Delegation of Malta,
said Malta had, over the past years, endeavoured to transform
itself into a country where information technology was
pervasive in every sector and sphere of economic and social
activity. The aim had never been to give technologies an
intrinsic significance. The objective had been and remained
the improvement of the social well-being of all Maltese
citizens and in sharpening competitiveness on the world scene.
The Government had led a concerted effort engaging all sectors
of the economy, civil society and the administration to
develop a broadly agreed national ICT strategy. The strategy
was built on two cardinal thrusts -- the enhancement of the
information society and the economy, and to further strengthen
the ICT infrastructure in the Government.
Mr. Frendo said Malta’s strategy was to attract the
interest of ICT multinationals and independent software
providers to secure synergies that would be beneficial to
them, as well as to the people of Malta. As a European Union
member with a long tradition of friendship, cooperation and
commercial exchange with all countries of the Mediterranean
region, Malta wished to contribute to the growth of wealth of
knowledge and activity in this area of the world, and would do
so. The Summit was an opportunity to redefine the old ways of
understanding the generation of wealth. All must enjoy the
benefits of ICTs and their potential for the improvement of
quality of life.
SERGIO MARCHI, Head of the Delegation of Canada,
said that in order to create an information society, Canada
had sought new means of using information and communication
technologies in ways to favourize economic, social and
cultural development thanks to the cooperation of the
Government, the private sector and civil society. Today,
Canada was one of the most connected countries in the world
and supported the creation of a global e-Policy Resource
network (ePolNET). This network would help countries in Africa
design and implement strategies and policies for using ICTs --
to improve governance, to promote economic growth, and to
improve education, health care and other public services.
However, the task had barely begun, since the gap between
developed and developing countries in access to technology,
information and knowledge persisted, and in some regions was
growing wider. As long as this divide existed, the global
information society would not be what it was hoped it would
be.
Canada’s vision of the global information society was to
include all people, everywhere in the world, to be based on
universal respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms,
and putting ICTs to work in the service of sustainable global
development -- beginning with the achievement of the
Millennium Development Goals. These were lofty goals, and
achieving them would require unprecedented levels of
commitment, imagination and above all partnership between
governments, the private sector, civil society and
international organizations. All should pledge to work
together to achieve the noble goal of building an inclusive
information society, a global village that supported freedom
and opportunity for all.
KALIOPALE TAVOLA, Minister for Foreign Affairs
and External Trade of Fiji, said he believed the
organization of the Summit was timely as there continued to be
widening gaps in digital and knowledge divides between the
technology-empowered and technology-excluded communities.
Ignoring the realities of that process would render most of
the communities to ever increasing irrelevance. The countries
of the developing world had inherent and persistent problems
including low human capital qualification level, lack of a
telecommunication infrastructure, inadequate national and
regional regulatory and judicial frameworks, and lack of
investment.
The opportunities and advantages emanating from more
liberal global information could extend to other sectors such
as education, health care, business, food security, women and
youth in development, and culture and development of
government services.
NICHOLAS THORNE, Head of the Delegation of the
United Kingdom, said that one must be clear that the
information society presented a wide set of issues to which
answers must be found. However, by its nature, the information
society defied being fitted into neat little boxes in which
politicians and bureaucrats most liked to work. He, therefore,
offered a few thoughts on what governments, in both developed
and developing countries could -- and could not -- do to
harness the immense potential of the information society.
Access to information and the ability to pass on your thoughts
to others were rights which governments interested in the
social and economic development of their countries must not
seek to undermine. The United Kingdom, and colleagues in the
European Union, had argued against any watering down of those
basic human rights of free expression and access to
information in the Declaration of Principles and Plan of
Action that would be adopted today.
Over the last few weeks, delegations had spoken about
creating a Fund to bridge the digital divide. The United
Kingdom encouraged countries to use the development provided
to bolster ICT projects. He did not believe that a new
international Fund could tackle the real underlying problems
nor that it would mobilize even a fraction of the money needed
to bridge the digital divide. A Fund was simply not the
answer. Other options held a lot more potential for bridging
not just the digital, but the welfare divide, seen in the
world today. Governments must act to create rather than stifle
market opportunities. In this context, he believed it a lost
opportunity that industry and civil society had not been more
involved in the Summit and its preparation. It was they who
would be best placed to make the information society happen
throughout the world.
BLANCANIEVE PORTOCARRERO, Head of the Delegation
of Venezuela, said the Summit was an opportunity to learn
together, and to build the information society, which was
quite simply a society of hope that would support the common
development of humankind. The challenge was to save humankind,
as legitimate uses of information were a common good, built
for all, by all. There was an urgent need to respect the
rights of linguistic diversity, to respect the past, and to
live in health, knowledge, peace, and spiritual harmony,
nourished and able to decide on one’s own life: and this could
only be achieved by good governance. Today, there could be
satisfaction that a process had been initiated that would lead
to Tunis. There had been deep and rich debate both on matters
of theory and of practice. There was a political will which
should redefine itself in order to understand that a society
needed to be based on people.
The world had undergone profound changes, the product of
human ingenuity and progress -- this was a great revolution on
several fronts: the scientific, quantum, and womanhood levels.
The digital divide was quite simply disparity which made
dialogue impossible between civilizations, and which
perpetuated inequality of development. Venezuela had committed
itself to making information and communication technologies
widespread, as they were vital for the economic, political,
cultural and social welfare of the country. The technological
potential of the information society should be oriented
towards the independence, interdependence and universality of
human rights, which were the cornerstone of sustainable
development. Technology could ensure happiness, but only when
appropriately applied, and this should be strived towards.
IMELDA HENKIN, Deputy Executive Director of the
United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), said that the
poverty divide and digital divide were interrelated. The UNFPA
was the first to provide information through its Web site on
reproductive health. If the experience of the Fund and the
lessons learnt by its partners were combined, it would further
improve the information society. The agency was also offering
its innovations and experiences to the developing countries.
It was working with the Government of Ireland in developing
tools that would generate knowledge. The tools would be
provided in the languages of the users. The Government of
Jordan was also collaborating with the agency in transforming
software into Arabic language.
KAMEL AYADI, President of the World Federation of
Engineering Organizations, said that the Federation
represented more than 10 million professionals. It had been
closely involved in the preparation of the Summit. In past
years, the Federation had held a number of international
events, including the World Congress on the Digital Divide,
held in Tunisia. It was true that the Summit must cover many
concerns; it also remained true that the technological and
scientific component remained an intrinsic part of information
and communication technologies and access to them. The
Federation called on the international community to ensure
that the role of scientists and engineers should be fully
recognized in the consideration of the information society. He
stressed that, in return, science must serve the needs of
populations and technological research must be geared to
finding solutions. Concluding, he expressed the determination
of the Federation to work towards the implementation of the
Plan of Action, in cooperation with other partners.
TALAL ABU-GHAZALEH, Chairman and CEO of Talal
Abu-Ghazaleh & Co. International, said the follow-up to
Tunis needed to define an implementation mechanism and an
accountability system for the Plan of Action. The United
Nations ICT Task Force provided a forum for issues related to
the Internet. The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and
Numbers (ICANN) had performed well under its mandate, but what
was not within its mandate needed to be addressed and given
real world solutions, and could not be left to cyberspace.
Multilingualization and internationalization of the Internet
needed to be promoted to make it truly global. This
predominantly developing World Summit would hopefully lead to
a Tunis developed World Summit, where the debate could be in a
familial atmosphere of global interest. Should the digital
divide continue to grow, least developed countries would
become extinct, and the developed countries would suffer.
ALICIA BARCENA, Deputy Executive Secretary of the
United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the
Caribbean (ECLAC), said that the challenges put at the
international level had strengthened the regional grouping of
Latin American and Caribbean countries. The region was now
building a strategy well adapted to the needs of each country
in order to meet public policies in information and
communication technologies. E-government would be a very
effective approach to the region’s States in their efforts to
have access to the information society. The interregional
market had been widened; and linguistic barriers had been
resolved.
MILILANI TRASK, United Nations Permanent Forum on
Indigenous Issues, said the Forum was a newly created body
and served as an advisory body to the Economic and Social
Council on issues impacting indigenous peoples with regard to
health, education, culture, language, and the environment. As
a representative of over 370 million indigenous peoples, it
was with great consternation that she had seen the final
language of the Declaration. She had noted the deletion of
vital provisions for indigenous people. Most disturbing was
the deletion of the text that would force States and the
private sector to get the consent of indigenous peoples for
the use and display of their traditional knowledge. These
issues must be addressed in order to make the world a safe
place for indigenous peoples. If the economic information and
digital divide was to be bridged, information and
communication technologies must support true cultural
diversity and preserve and promote the traditional knowledge
of indigenous peoples.
Ms. Trask said indigenous peoples must be granted the right
to self-determination, the right to their traditional lands
and to their traditional heritage. She assured participants
that despite the disappointment of the Forum, it would
continue to work in good faith with States in the hope that
the information society would become inclusive for all,
including indigenous people.
VELUSAMY MATHIVANAN, Chairman and CEO of
CrimsonLogic, said there was a key concern that many
businesses concerned with information and communication
technologies faced when expanding overseas, and that was
intellectual property rights. Business recognized and
acknowledged the rights of both users and creators, but strong
intellectual property protection protected employment and
technological innovation. These rights were monopolies
designed to benefit societies as a whole, an incentive to
commercialization and innovation. For an information
technology company, intellectual property rights were a life
source, and if the protection laws did not allow it to reap
due and fair returns, companies would look elsewhere.
Trade-related aspects of intellectual property rights (TRIPs)
was a step forward, since it described the minimum standard of
protection that was allowable in the world economy, bringing
all under a common international rule, making the business
environment more attractive to the investor. However, there
was a need for governments to take steps to ensure that the
laws were upheld, and strongly at that. If firm intellectual
property protection rights were in place and enforced, the
world would be one step closer to bridging the digital divide,
since information, innovation and creation would then be
accessible to all.
CARLOS AFONSO, President, Rede de
Informações para o Terceiro Setor, said that the Social
Forum held in Porto Allegro in Brazil had concluded that the
building of a new world was still possible. A new relationship
should be constituted between civil society and the rest of
the world. An inclusive programme had been proposed to be run
by the community itself. In many countries, wealth had
accumulated in the hands of a few. Also in countries where the
HIV/AIDS pandemic was prevailing, there was an urgent need for
generic medicines. However, the availability of drugs for the
victims was limited, with the private sector enjoying a
monopoly on their fabrication and distribution.
OLIVIER PIOU, Chief Executive Officer of Axalto,
said Axalto’s contribution to the Summit was the Smart Card.
This was the provision of a building block for information
society that was able to ensure access while ensuring
security. The Smart Card was a conventional identity token
combined with a digital identity, accessible by machines.
Providing safe identification was essential to ensure trust in
the application and the content that was available to human
beings and their dialogue, as well as for economic
investments. Giving an example of the work of Axalto, he said
that biometrics could turn into the most positive force, if
combined with a portable secure object for identification. If
such identification methods were not used without the
application of a smart card, such tools could be hazardous.
Another example was the use of wireless technologies such as
cellular phones. One must remember that such radio frequency
identification systems were activated from a distance making
it easy to install a reading antenna without being noticed or
without consent. The message was -- the more powerful the
tools, the more the duty to use them for the best of humanity.
This was why Axalto believed that it was essential that
identification systems ensured security and installed trust.
Axalto was determined to work towards such safety standards in
the modern information civil society.
SEAN O'SIOCHRU, Spokesperson of CRIS Campaign, said
in some respects civil society had been the main beneficiary
of the World Summit on the Information Society. It was the
first time that civil society had come together in such
diversity and such numbers to work together on information and
communication issues. Much had been learnt, and there had been
a broad consensus that had resulted in a coherent,
comprehensive and convincing Civil Society Declaration on the
vision of the information society. This shared a sentence with
the Declaration of Principles: "Communication is a fundamental
social process, a basic human need, and the foundation of all
social organization." The Civil Society Declaration, however,
went further in proposing how the ICT society could be built
while keeping people at the centre. The role of ICTs in this
process of civil society networking was significant, but the
huge imbalances in ICTs globally were also reflected, and this
was regretted. Civil society should build on the process that
had been begun, and governments, intergovernmental
organizations and all others were invited to join with civil
society in creating the information and communication society
for all.
PHILIPPE PETIT, Deputy General Director of the
World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), said that
intellectual property rights were fundamental tools which
supported creation of the information and innovations that
were constitutive elements of the
information society. The intellectual property system
protected creators and secured their livelihoods, and in so
doing, it would provide them with incentives to allow wider
and freer access to their knowledge assets. It would also
sustain vibrant creative industries that supported developing
and developed economies alike, contributing to reducing the
digital divide. The intellectual property system would enable
the international community to exercise human rights, both
economic and moral, as owners of the fruits of its creativity.
All countries had limitless intellectual assets, shown in
their intellectual heritage, traditional knowledge, and human
ingenuity. The WIPO was working with its member States to
ensure that appropriate traditional knowledge assets were
recognized and protected as intellectual property.
MICHEL JARRAUD, Deputy Secretary-General of the
World Meteorological Organization, said weather- and
climate-related extreme events including tornadoes,
thunderstorms, storms, cyclones, floods and drought, accounted
for nearly 75 per cent of all disasters and led to human
suffering, the loss of lives and economic damage. Monitoring
these events, prediction of their movement and the timely
issuance of warning were essential for mitigating the
disastrous impact of such events on populations and economies.
Indeed, information and communication technologies had played
a key role in meteorology since the nineteenth century with
the advent of the telegraph. The information society must
further the capabilities of the national meteorological and
hydrological services in producing and delivering information,
warnings and comprehensive and effective services to the
population for the safety of life, property and the general
welfare of people. Access to information provided by such
services was of crucial importance for the sustainable
development of all countries.
JEAN DELLO, Minister of Posts and Telecommunications of
the Republic of Congo, said that at a time when all of
humanity was confronted with the most crucial problems, it
went without saying that the Summit brought a definite hope to
all peoples of the world, as it opened a path to the
inalienable and undeniable right to information, knowledge,
and, by corollary, to development. It answered the profound
aspirations of the States of Africa in particular. It was a
truism to say that information and communication technologies
(ICTs) were now necessary elements to promote sustainable
development, democracy, transparency, responsibility and good
governance. The ICTs had become a powerful tool for change in
the emerging international economic system, at the heart of
which they were an ever more important part of its
competitiveness.
Information and communication technologies could help
individuals and communities to fully realize themselves,
promote economic, social, cultural and political development
as well as improve the quality of life, and reduce poverty,
hunger and social exclusion, the Congolese Minister said. This
was why the Congo upheld the objectives defined in the
Declaration of Principles and the Plan of Action. However, the
Congo believed that the Summit could only reach its goals if
the digital divide which divided, on the one hand, the
countries of the North and the countries of the South, and, on
the other hand, social classes within countries, was reduced
to nothing; and equally, if mechanisms of transfer of
technology and sharing of knowledge were set into motion.
MARK J. MWANDOSYA, Minister for Communications
and Transport of the United Republic of Tanzania, said
that the "Missing Link Report" had demonstrated the glaring
disparity in the distribution of telephone lines. Three
quarters of the lines were concentrated in the nine developed
countries and the remaining 25 per cent were distributed
unevenly throughout the rest of the world. The disparities
portrayed in the report still existed today. Developing
countries were characterized by low penetration with the least
covered being the rural areas. The unprecedented technological
advances continued to reinforce the disparities. The emerging
high use of Internet services had created another divide, a
digital divide among countries and regions. Likewise in
developing countries, a digital divide existed between the
urban and rural and between the high-income and low-income
urban populations. Yet, technological advances provided a real
opportunity to address the divide and a platform to leapfrog
the development process towards information and a knowledge
society.
Mr. Mwandosya said Tanzania had in place a National
Development Vision 2025, which envisaged the attainment of a
people-centred, an inclusive and an information- and
knowledge-based society. A poverty-eradication strategy was
being implemented as a vehicle to achieving the Vision
objectives, which were in line with the Millennium Development
Goals. To that end, Tanzania had developed an ICT policy and
believed that an information society could only be built upon
a firm foundation of an ICT infrastructure.
EL ZIBEIR BASHIR TAHA, Minister of Sciences and
Technology of the Sudan, said that the Summit aimed to
reach consensus on a Declaration of Principles to uphold and
organize the distribution of information. The Sudan supported
this objective, as well as the objective to ensure that
information was protected from all forms of discrimination and
corrupting influences. In this context, it would be important
to eliminate monopolies in software and hardware and to
respect cultural and linguistic diversity. The monopoly
currently at play made the flow of information one way and
unbalanced. The Sudan, therefore, supported the establishment
of a Digital Solidarity Fund. The digital gap could be
narrowed through national processes and political will, he
said.
Believing that there was indeed a need to create a new
information society, the Sudan had undertaken several
projects. These included the establishment of several major
institutional frameworks, increased investment in the
development of the flow of information, and the creation of
national networks, as well as councils for higher education.
New laws had also been enacted that dealt with television and
radio licensing. Each country had its own characteristics, he
said, reminding participants that the Sudan was the largest
African country, with a multitude of cultural influences. This
meant that Sudan had a growth ranging from 6 to 11 per cent in
gross domestic product (GDP) terms and had much to offer for
investors.
SÉVERIN NDIKUMUGONGO, Minister of Transport of Burundi,
said the Summit was an appeal to the conscience of mankind, to
the international community to say that the world was changing
for all of humanity, moving from an industrial to an
information society. The Declaration of Principles and Plan of
Action would act as guidelines for the new century. There was
a need to adopt an appropriate code of conduct to live in this
new national and international environment, surrounded by
information and communication technologies. The lack of
infrastructure, including the lack of a telecommunications
infrastructure, hindered the realization of these goals, and a
main task remained, above all, globally developing
telecommunications infrastructures to provide access and
connectivity to a majority of people.
The goal was to integrate countries into the knowledge and
information society, and the effects were found in all social,
cultural and business aspects of that country. The Digital
Access Index established a scale to measure countries
connectivity. Burundi required assistance to ensure the
prosperity of its people, and required international
solidarity to bridge the digital divide and to live fully in
the information society, as was the right of the people of
Burundi. There should be no delay in making the acts promised
at the Summit concrete, in order to share the joys and smiles
of Burundi, and this would happen by providing the country
with digital solidarity.
ABDULMALEK AL-MOALEMI, Minister of
Telecommunications and Information Technology of Yemen,
said his country’s policy on telecommunications had increased
the level of education among the population. The policy had
also enabled the country to cope with the challenges in this
sector. It also designed the strategies on how to deal with
the information and communication technologies in the future.
The Government of Yemen would like to see that its men and
women enjoyed access to information in the society. The
development of the Internet had also been an important tool.
The Government was working to bridge the gap between the poor
and the rich in the nation. It had injected inputs into the
dynamics of the economic progress that the State was
achieving.
OVIDIO DE JESUS AMARAL, Minister of Transport
Communication and Public Work of Timor-Leste, said that
telecommunications services in his country were operated by
Timor Telecom -- a new company that had been created by
Portugal Telecom International. Timor Telecom had the
exclusive operation of services pertaining to fixed and mobile
telephones, data, leased circuits, transport of diffusion
signals and international links. At present, mobile telephone
services were already operating in five districts.
Participants were also told about the public radio
broadcasting service in Dili which covered all districts.
The Minister from Timor-Leste said that all activities in
the telecommunications sector were under the control of the
Government. In addition, the Government had established a
regulatory body named ARCOM, working under the auspices of the
Ministry of Transport, Communications and Public Works, and
responsible for all telecom activities such as frequencies
management, tariff control, telecommunication policy,
licensing and quality of service. Problems faced were power
limitations and the fact that all telecommunication equipment
had to be installed in containers since all buildings had been
destroyed. Furthermore, human resources were a big challenge
since at present there were minimal human resources with the
capabilities to exploit ICT issues in the country. He said
that if people were educated in using ICT facilities, the
growth of ICT-based services in Timor-Leste would boost the
national economy.
ALEXANDER CHIKVAIDZE, Head of the Delegation of Georgia,
said some issues deserved special attention. Necessary skills
and knowledge were required at the national level in order to
benefit from the information society, the knowledge-based
society, and capacity programmes, taking into account national
needs and conditions which needed to be implemented. An
environment conducive to the transfer of technology needed to
be created, and effective cooperation between international
organizations was also vital, as was the need to share best
practices and experiences. National efforts to build a people-centred
information society with development issues at their core
should be supported by international aid in order to build a
globally inclusive information society. There was, therefore,
a need to create a fund for this. The inclusion of ICT-related
programmes in national development and poverty-eradication
strategies were important, since these would eventually lead
to the creation of sustainable development.
Georgia placed the highest importance on creating an
information society and joining the global knowledge-based
society. Georgia upheld human rights principles, international
law, and principles of friendly relations with all its
neighbours, near or far. The main domestic preoccupation of
the country remained these issues, and the creation of a
decent standard of living for its entire population.
ALVARO MOSCOSO BLANCO, Head of the Delegation of
Bolivia, said his country shared and reaffirmed the
principles of recognition and preservation of human dignity
and the respect for cultural diversity. Bolivia supported the
proposal of the Digital Solidarity Fund and hoped that the
results of the discussions at the Summit would allow the
establishment of a mechanism to manage the Internet in a
democratic, transparent and multilateral manner. Bolivia had a
long tradition in managing information. The radio service was
among the principal sources of information, and it was used to
raise awareness of human rights among the country’s
communities. It also contributed to raise the level of
development and social communication of the population.
Information and communication technologies had been
instrumental in the extension of mass education among the
population, particularly the indigenous peoples. The quality
of education provided in the country had also been improved,
thanks to the use of ICTs. The Government would continue to
utilize ICTs in order to generate a better social inclusion
and to attain efficient and transparent public administration.
NUNZIO ALFREDO D’ANGIERI, Head of the Delegation
of Belize, said that it was possible to improve the
conditions of humanity thanks to the possibilities offered by
the Internet. The world had become so small that everyone was
responsible for each other. The free exchange of information
had changed the nature of society; this meant that everyone
had a responsibility to contribute to society. In this
connection, it was stressed that the dissemination of
knowledge had no value if it was not entirely available to all
peoples and cultures in the world. The goal of the Summit must
be to make information and communication technologies more
accessible to everyone, particularly developing countries.
These countries must be helped in their determination to
achieve a social balance. Participants were told about the
importance of supporting scientific research since it led to
the development of new technologies that could be enormously
important for mankind.
Sustainable capacity building must be extended to ensure
that all countries could benefit from the new opportunities
available through ICTs, he said. In Belize, the Government was
building schools that provided information-technology training
available to all, including to the Maya population. Education
and science must be recognized as fundamental in the
information society, as well as the right for women and
vulnerable groups to have access to ICTs. Belize supported the
proposal to create a Digital Solidarity Fund. Such a Fund
would give developing countries access to an important tool
for sustainable development.
YAAKOV LEVY, Head of the Delegation of Israel,
said the Declaration of Principles and Plan of Action
constituted a major advance in addressing the global issues of
the information society. An important part was played by civil
society and the private sector. Although the information
society was a difficult concept to define, it certainly had
tremendous effects on all spheres of human activity. The means
of human communication had changed radically within a very
short time. Information and communication technologies had
become an integral part of daily life, as millions of people
across the world exchanged information and ideas, regardless
of borders or distances. However, ICTs were not a panacea.
Access and usage were still denied to billions around the
world. This new gap, the digital divide, between rich and
poor, developed and developing, privileged and less
privileged, was a worrisome phenomenon that needed to be
addressed.
Mr. Levy said the development of an information society was
a unique tool which could be used to promote universal access
to information and education, but at the same time it also
created new problems and threats: a tool that could be used
for peaceful and constructive purposes could also be used with
other intentions -- the use of the Internet by terrorists and
paedophiles was a blatant example of this situation. It was
incumbent upon participants to seek ways to unite against the
contamination of the Internet by xenophobia, racism, and
religious intolerance, including the resurgence of
anti-Semitism, and to find the appropriate technological and
legal remedies to these phenomena. By learning about each
other, mutual suspicions would be erased, and understanding
and peace would be built, which should be among the aims of
the information society.
MANUEL A. GONZALEZ SANZ, Head of the Delegation
of Costa Rica, hoped that the discussions held during the
Summit would be translated into concrete measures. His country
believed that effective policies on information and
communication technologies should prompt better living
conditions for people living both in rural and urban areas.
The ICTs should also help increase the capacities of hospitals
to treat patients and increase the availability of medicine
for all. The freedom of opinion expressed through the
information society should generate better use of ICTs.
Generally, ICTs should create a culture of peace and
non-violence.
Costa Rica had been implementing mechanisms that
accelerated access to the Internet. It was also using
telemedicine for the benefit of the population. It had put
more emphasis on e-government for the better management of
public affairs. The Government believed that the digital
divide should serve the equal access of people to ICTs.
JOAO AUGUSTO DE MEDICIS, Executive Secretary of
the Community of Portuguese- Speaking Countries, said the
Community represented 220 million people in four continents
and had, as its goal, to move towards a future marked by
justice and democracy. The potential of information and
communication technologies must be used to move the
international community towards a better society for all.
Information technologies had modified the world, but had only
reached a small part of the world population. This was a
worrying trend since there was now a separation between
countries that did and did not produce information
technologies. The ICTs could not change the course of history,
he said. It was men and women who could change history and
move society towards a better future. In July 2003, the
Community had adopted a resolution on supporting the
preparations for the Summit. At the end of the day, a
Declaration of Principles would be adopted. The Community
would like to see the provisions of the Declaration
implemented. When being implemented, States must not forget
that a precondition for preserving and stimulating the
cultures of peoples would be the dissemination of information
in more languages on the Internet. The information society
must also be based on freedom of expression.
JEAN-PIERRE MAZERY, President of the Council for
Communication of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta,
said that if the Order of Malta recognized the importance of
information and communication technologies, it remained
conscious of the fact that their use could lead to all sorts
of abuses. It was essential that their use respect the dignity
of the human person, human rights, the rights of the child and
the family, as well as those fundamental truths that were
freedom of religion, conscience and opinion, and the respect
for private life. What made communication was not the
techniques, but the men and societies that used them in their
cultural and social dimensions. Care should be taken to ensure
that the performances of the new technologies did not supplant
the ideal that was centred on the dignity and respect of man,
and towards which the information society should tend. This
society should be able to lean on a real ethical dimension, by
which it was meant that ICTs should be considered as a tool at
the service of each and every one, and not as a goal in
themselves nor to be used exclusively to subdue new markets.
The goal of the Summit was to continue to improve the
conditions of humanity, by using new technologies
appropriately, in a spirit of justice and sharing.
CARLYLE CORBIN, Observer of the United States
Virgin Islands, said information and communication
technologies provided an opportunity for development in the
current globalized world. However, the digital divide
continued to divide people and to marginalize others. The
Barbados Declaration had affirmed that ICTs should be oriented
towards economic and social development, as well as poverty
eradication. Communities could be empowered if every school
was equipped with information technology and if all students
had access to the Internet.
AMIR A. DOSSAL, Executive Director of the United
Nations Fund for International Partnerships, said the
Summit was about partnership and had been a turning point for
the international community, as well as civil society. By
working together, new partnerships had been made.
Globalization and the changing nature of international
relations called for innovations, he said. Finding solutions
to complex problems, such as HIV/AIDS, environmental
degradation, access to safe drinking water and the digital
divide, could no longer be approached by sovereign States
alone. There had been a rise in the number, diversity and
influence of partners in recent years, much as a result of
progress in information and communication technologies. In the
past, private and public partnerships simply meant "you give
us the money and we will carry out the projects". Partnerships
today were more geared to benefiting and learning from each
others’ experiences. A number of new initiatives had been
developed, but the challenge remained how to make these
developments accessible to all. In addition, he stressed the
importance of South-South cooperation which, in this context,
was key, particularly in achieving the Millennium Development
Goals. |