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World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) ends on mixed note
Hilmi Toros
November 18, 2005
http://www.ipsterraviva.net/tv/tunis/viewstory.asp?idnews=408
The World Summit on
the Information Society (WSIS) concluded Friday night with claims
of success by the United Nations, governments and the private sector,
but civil society refused to wholeheartedly embrace its outcome.
"Success or failure
is too strong to characterise the summit," Anriette Esterhuysen,
executive director of the civil society group Association for Progressive
Communications, told IPS-TerraViva. "Let's say the summit
has been valuable. The impact is yet to be seen."
Civil society achieved
a breakthrough, she said, by gaining recognition as a "stakeholder"
in a new web body (the Forum on Internet Governance) along with
governments, the private sector and international organisations,
but, in the face of unyielding opposition from the United States,
failed in efforts to wrest Internet management from a US-based agency.
A Tunis Commitment at
the closure of the summit had participants pledging "to build
a people-centred, inclusive and development-oriented Information
Society" so that "people everywhere can create access,
utilise and share information and knowledge." The Commitment
also stressed that "the freedom of expression and the free
flow of information, ideas and knowledge, are essential for the
Information Society and development."
"Results are very
positive and balanced," the UN's Sarbuland Khan, coordinator
of the Task Force on Information Communication and Technology, told
IPS-TerraViva. "There is now a clear understanding that such
issues cannot be solved alone and only through alliances."
Civil society groups,
in a joint statement, found were not too enthusiastic about the
results. They said the proposed Forum, although embracing them,
lacks detail and has a life-span of only five years, subject to
extension. It is more known for what it cannot do rather than what
it can: it has no oversight or management role.
Also under attack by
civil society is the lack of any new mechanism for financing. There
is a Fund for Internet development, but participation in it is voluntary
and there is uncertainty about any donors apart from France.
Another civil society
demand is the establishment of an independent commission "to
review national and international ICT regulations and practices
compliant with human rights standards."
If civil society did
not get its way at the summit, the private sector appears to have
done so. Big business played a role in preventing moves to place
Internet management under the control of a multilateral unit. Its
goods and gadgets dominated exhibitions and contacts were made that
are sure to bring additional business in due time.
As the summit concluded,
the prevailing feeling is that the private sector, shut out of summits
and other major inter-governmental meetings until a few years ago,
is on the march to increased influence in global affairs beyond
just business. It had strong and coordinated representation through
the International Chamber of Commerce and other well-funded organisations,
while civil society organisations lacked any unified structure.
At the same time, the
private sector is also showing a "more caring" attitude,
as multinationals, once under suspicion by the development community,
now go after a slew of partnerships with governments, the United
Nations and NGOs in the developing world.
"There is a strong
thirst for involvement in development," says the UN's
Khan, who spent time with executives of Siemens, Microsoft and others
during the three-day summit.
"Finally, there
is full and accepted realisation that the private sector should
participate in development," says Gora Datta, president of
the US software company Cal2Cal. He adds that it is also good for
business to be able to reach much of the world's population
in emerging markets.
Summit participants were
outshone by the gadgetry on display. In fact, there was what could
be called a Machine of the Summit, a simple $100 laptop for students.
It is powered by a wind-up crank and consumes very little energy
and was developed by Professor Nicholas Negroponte of the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology's Media Lab.
At the unveiling of the
so-called Green Machine, Negroponte says millions could be sold
in the developing world within a year. Negroponte told the summit
that he hoped small quantities, several thousands, would be produced
this year and more than 100 million by the end of 2006 or 2007.
Brazil, Thailand, Egypt and Nigeria are candidates to receive the
first wave of laptops starting in February or March, and each will
buy at least 1 million units.
Security was tight at
the summit with numerous checkpoints around the conference site
on the shore of the capital. Although there were no major public
demonstrations, protests were directed at the Tunisian government
by civil society members, the media and even the United States government
over freedom of expression and human rights issues in Tunis.
As the summit was ending,
Steve Buckley of the Internal Freedom of Expression Exchange (IFEX),
a coalition of 14 NGOs, issued an appeal to UN Secretary-General
Kofi Annan for a formal investigation into the treatment of journalists
by Tunisian authorities, including the reported stabbing of a French
journalist, the denial of entry to Tunis of others and harassment
within the city.
Seven people on a hunger
strike and demanding the release of prisoners of conscience were
visited by representatives of a civil society organising committee,
the European Union, members of the European Parliament and Iranian
lawyer and Nobel Peace Prize winner Shirin Ebadi.
The US delegation, in
a press note, expressed its "disappointment" over the
lack of freedom of expression and assembly in Tunis.
The summit drew, by official
estimates, over 18,000 people, civil society members being the largest
group with 5,864 and followed by government with 5,782. The private
sector was also strong with 3,981 members present and the media
had 1,218 accredited representatives.
Of 44 heads of state
or government present at the summit, most were from Africa -- and
only one from a developed nation, Switzerland. Swiss President Samuel
Schmid was blunt with his open criticism of the Tunisian government
over human rights issues and his speech was censored by Tunisian
television.
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