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Broadcasters' Declaration
World Broadcasting Unions (WBU), World Summit on the Information Society
December 09, 2003

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Statements from broadcasters representing the world's main regions:

Fritz F. Pleitgen, for Europe
Comments on Article 3 (paragraphs 1-3) of the Broadcasters' Declaration.

Article 3 of the common platform of the World Broadcasting Union speaks about the vital role that electronic media in general, and broadcasting in particular, will play in the information society. In this new era, all of us will communicate individually via the Internet - thus in a somewhat isolated way. But we will also need overviews of what else is happening in the world and explanations as to why it is happening.

In the knowledge society, we will be more dependent on information than ever before in human history. At same time, the need to develop individual professional expertise will grow ever greater. However, the more people become experts in one small area of human knowledge, the less capacity they have to follow other developments. This means they will need to depend more on trusted agents to provide them with this information in a reliable and easily understandable way.

Speaking to you from the perspective of Director General of a large independent German public service broadcasting organisation and as a journalist, I can testify that this is what we are mandated to achieve: Our role is one of a trusted agent. Through our radio and television programmes we aspire to bring the world to our listeners and viewers whereever they are, whatever their personal background, and whatever their economic means.

However, this kind of task brings with it great responsibilities. Television is a powerful communications tool. It disseminates compelling images and important messages for 24 hours a day to millions of people. This is why independent broadcasting services are so important: Distanced from political and economic pressures, i.e. independent of either media moguls, giant corporations, or governments, and with public instead of private funding, our public service mission requires us to provide unbiased information. It also requires us to contribute to cultural diversity through informational, educational, cultural, as well as entertainment and sports programmes. We are expected to reflect vulnerable and minority interests in our programmes, promote indigenous productions, and generally guarantee access for every citizen in society to a wealth of high quality information, knowledge, culture, and entertainment.

Europe, we refer to independent broadcasting services with such missions as public service broadcasting. This signifies that our programmes are considered to be in the general public interest. We are not providing a commercial service which is simply determined by the market laws of demand and supply. In Europe, this public service is legally safeguarded in a special amendment to the Treaty of the European Communities, because we believe that public service broadcasting plays a vital role in the freedom of speech, media pluralism, cultural diversity, and democracy as a whole. In order to ensure that we properly fulfil our public service remit, independent representatives of the general public control our activities through so-called broadcasting councils. This makes us accountable to the citizens for what we do as public broadcasters.

We in Europe are convinced that public service broadcasting can serve as a model for the information society. With media concentration ever growing, and globally marketed audiovisual content flooding our television screens, we will be needed, perhaps more than ever before, to be the trusted information agents for our citizens, to contribute to cultural diversity, and to help safeguard media pluralism.

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