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Mugabe
lashes Western media at Geneva summit
Bernhard Warner and Thomas Atkins, Reuters
December 11, 2003
http://www.enn.com/news/2003-12-11/s_11214.asp
GENEVA - Zimbabwean
President Robert Mugabe launched a virulent attack on Western media
Wednesday at a world summit on making better use of information
technology such as the Internet to help poorer nations.
In his first
foreign excursion since quitting the 54-nation Commonwealth, Mugabe
railed against new technologies, saying they were used for espionage
and to weaken the Third World in the face of "a dangerous imperial
world order led by warrior states and kingdoms."
"Beneath the rhetoric of free press and transparency is the
iniquity of hegemony. The quest for an information society should
not be at the expense of building a sovereign national society,"
he said in a scathing address.
Mugabe, who
shut Zimbabwe's only major independent newspaper in September, withdrew
from the Commonwealth during the weekend after the group of mostly
former British colonies renewed a suspension imposed over Zimbabwe's
human rights record.
Other developing country leaders at the summit took the opportunity
to urge rich states to do more to help them boost the use of technologies
such as the Worldwide Web and mobile phones as a springboard to
economic growth.
"From trade
to telemedicine, from education to environmental protection, we
have in our hands, on our desktops and in the skies above, the ability
to improve standards of living for millions upon millions of people,"
U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan said at the opening ceremony.
Roughly 90 percent
of the world population has no access to the Internet, depriving
them of a 21st century resource and spurring a "digital divide"
between rich and poor.
'Digital
solidarity fund'
Poorer countries, particularly from Africa, had been pressing for
the launch of a "Digital Solidarity Fund" to help finance
the infrastructure they say is needed to close the gap.
But the idea was opposed by richer countries and the summit declaration
- to be approved formally at the close Friday - merely commits states
to concluding a study on the issue before a second summit due to
be held in Tunis in 2005.
Summit topics
ranged from how to battle spam to whether administration of the
Worldwide Web should be put under international control.
The latter idea,
backed by Brazil and other developing countries but also opposed
by the richer states, was also effectively put on hold after negotiators
agreed to set up a committee to review Internet management.
The three-day
meeting, sponsored by the United Nations, has drawn officials from
175 countries, but few of the 60 heads of state or government attending
come from Europe or North America.
The role of
the Internet in distributing news and views has focused attention
on press freedom and the fact that many of the governments present,
including Zimbabwe's, have been accused of hobbling the media and
restricting access to the Web.
Activists are
particularly incensed that the second phase of the summit in 2005
is due to be held in Tunisia, whose government is regularly accused
of repressing press freedom.
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