geert lovink on Fri, 24 Oct 2003 14:44:18 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> wsis digest no. 2 |
World Summit on Information Society Nettime Digest, no. 2, October 24, 2003 (alternative counter activities gather at http://www.geneva03.net) 0. Tough issues face Information Society summit 1. World Web Summit Worries Journalists 2. Unions Want Employment Issues on Agenda 3. Temporary Cyber Bus project 4. WSIS events and information 5. GEMEINSAME VISION IN WEITER FERNE (Berlin event) 6. More hypocrisy as Tunisia hosts international congress on digital divide 7. Swiss cultural project during WSIS 8. Statement of Bellagio Symposium on Media, Freedom and Poverty 9. "Vision Informationsgesellschaft" (Tutzing) 10. FSF/Richard Stallman @ WSIS -- 0. Tough issues face Information Society summit Major clash expected By John Blau, IDG News Service October 01, 2003 Delegates attending the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS)in Geneva in December can look forward to another major clash overseveral contentious issues that blocked agreement of two key documents during a critical round of negotiations in the Alpine city last month. WSIS is an attempt to bridge what many governments view as a widening gap between people who have access to modern communication services and information, and thus knowledge, and those who don't, according to Yoshio Utsumi, secretary general of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), the U.N. agency responsible for the summit. The importance of communications and access to networks "is no longer just a technical matter, but a fundamental policy goal for every nation," Utsumi said in a statement. At September's Prepcom-3, the final preparatory conference before the summit, government representatives and members of the private and civil sectors, including the media, met to agree on final drafts of two core documents, the Declaration of Principles and the Action Plan. Despite some progress, they failed to produce documents ready for signing at the world's first Information Society summit. Now the ITU is hastily trying to organize at least one "intersessional" meeting, if not two, in an effort to build a consensus before heads of state from at least 50 countries -- both developed and developing -- meet at the summit from Dec. 10-12, said Gary Fowlie, an ITU spokesman. The first intersessional meeting is planned for Nov. 11-14, "pending resources," he said. The second, depending on the outcome of the first, could take place directly before the summit from Dec. 7-9. The expectations of the summit are high if the Declaration of Principles is any indication. The document seeks "a commitment to build an inclusive Information Society where everyone can create, access, utilize and share information and knowledge, enabling individuals and communities to achieve their full potential and improve their quality of life in a sustainable manner." The document, representing a framework of fundamental principles, is intrinsically linked with the second, the Action Plan, which contains more than 140 items to achieve them. Copies of the draft documents are available on the ITU-sponsored WSIS Web site: www.itu.int/wsis. Both, however, are riddled with contentious issues, such as who will finance the development of the Information Society and govern the Internet, not to mention intellectual property rights, open-source software and freedom of expression. "This is the first time that issues like financing, Internet governance and security and even spam have ever been discussed at a global level," Fowlie said. "Because they're so broad and some of them so new, it's definitely a challenge to address them all." For sure, money is one of the biggest sticking points, according to the spokesman. Demands by several developing countries to create a "digital solidarity fund" have met strong resistance by developed countries, which argue that existing financing mechanisms could be better leveraged, he said. Another prickly subject, almost on par with financing, is Internet governance, Fowlie said. China and Brazil are among several countries calling for one or more global bodies to manage Internet resources, such as domain names, root servers and IP (Internet Protocol) addresses -- an area heavily controlled by the U.S. Hardly a surprise, the idea has fallen upon deaf ears in the U.S. delegation, which continues to back ICANN (Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers). Delegates from the European Union (EU) likewise support a private model, along the line of the U.S.-backed ICANN, preferring not to see the ITU become involved. Also, the role of different software models in ensuring access to information and knowledge has raised heated debate, according to the ITU spokesman. Many countries, and not just developing ones, feel that proprietary software, like that developed and marketed by Microsoft Corp., doesn't meet all users' needs optimally in terms of cost and usage. Earlier language in the August draft of the Action Plan, advocating wide use of open-source software, is toned down in the September draft, largely because of demands by U.S. and EU delegates that commercial software interests receive fair representation in the plan. The language now speaks of "striking a balance" among the different software models, including proprietary, open source and free software. The fact that free software is listed in the latest draft in addition to open source is the result of intensive lobbying by several groups, including the Free Software Foundation (FSF) Europe. "Free software doesn't have to be free of charge; it can be sold commercially," said FSF Europe President Georg Greve. "What distinguishes free software from the other software models is basically the freedom it gives users to modify, distribute and use the software in an unlimited way. Open source is a term that even Microsoft is now using when it talks about opening its code for governments to view. Microsoft software is proprietary software." Perhaps less contentious, but an issue nonetheless, is the protection of intellectual property rights (IPR), according to Fowlie. "We have to look at how IPR, patents and copyrights are affected by a global communications network," he said. "There's been a lot of debate on this." Freedom of expression is another sensitive topic and one that must be addressed if communication services are to extend to the masses around the globe, the spokesman said. With so many issues still on the negotiating table and with so little time and money to resolve them, some participants in the negotiations wonder how successful the December summit will be. "Consensus building is very difficult to begin with," said Karen Banks, a spokeswoman for the Association for Progressive Communications, one of the nongovernmental organizations observing the negotiations as a member of the "Civil Society" group of participants. "But add to that the fact that this whole effort is incredibly under-resourced. It's primarily a U.S.-EU affair. They have resources to send delegates who can argue their cases. Many of the developing countries don't have these resources." Other Civil Society members have been even more outspoken in their criticism. Governments should "listen or leave us alone in the Information Age," said Ralf Bendrath, a Civil Society representative associated with Germany's Heinrich Böll Foundation, in a statement posted on the organization's Web site, www.worldsummit2003.org. The Civil Society, representing about 500 groups, has begun drafting a "vision paper," which it plans to submit in December, according to a statement. Should heads of state in December sign documents that fall short of the expectations of the Civil Society and others, they will have an opportunity to make corrections in two years, Fowlie said. "We are blessed with the fact that this is a two-phase summit," he said. "When we meet again in Tunisia in two years, we can measure what success has been made and, if necessary, re-evaluate the Action Plan and make adjustments. This is the beginning of a process; it's not the end." The follow-up summit is scheduled for Nov. 16-18, 2005, in Tunis, Tunisia. -- http://www.mediainfo.com/editorandpublisher/headlines/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=2007079 1. World Web Summit Worries Journalists With Good Reason, Says 'E&P' Editorial This unsigned editorial appeared in the Oct. 20 issue of Editor and Publisher. When the Inter American Press Association (IAPA) met last week in Chicago, it wrestled with the many issues that personally concern Latin American newspaper publishers, such as the death threats that are all-too-frequently carried out against their reporters. Yet, again and again, the IAPA meeting returned to an issue that at first blush seems remote from the quotidian concerns of Latin American publishers and editors: the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) that convenes in Geneva Dec. 10 to 12. IAPA officials peppered speeches with warnings about the event, and the group unanimously passed a resolution expressing grave doubts about the intentions of many summit participants. Why all this fuss about yet another United Nations chat fest? Because Latin American journalists have learned through long and bitter experience that the obtuse blather issued at these international jaw-jaws is often used by their governments back home to justify censoring and closing newspapers and fining or imprisoning journalists. And that, Latin newspapers fear, is what may be in store for them in Geneva. The summit has the noble purpose of eliminating the so-called "digital divide" between rich and poor nations. But in the preparatory meetings for the summit, numerous governments have used this goal to slip in restrictions on the free flow of information on the Web. Cuba, for instance, has tried to insert language that would encourage government "screening of private media. The problem is, the WSIS allows 185 UN members a shot at regulating the Internet, and authoritarian nations such as China -- which keeps its Web users inside a Great Firewall -- are not shy about trying to impose their censorious standards on the world at large. It cannot be taken as a good sign that this whole summit process will wind up in 2005 with a declaration and "action plan" issued from Tunisia, where Zouhair Yahyaoui languishes in jail after being arrested and tortured by special Interior Ministry police last year because his news Web site TUNeZINE made fun of President Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali. There is some good news about the WSIS. The United States is taking the position that the Internet must be allowed to operate under the same free press and free speech principles as any other media. And in a high-level preparatory meeting in Paris last week, ministers finally adopted language that's been missing from previous working papers: a declaration that WSIS standards must include press freedom and universal access to news and information. The enemies of liberty, however, are nothing if not persistent. Like their Latin American counterparts, U.S. newspapers must remain alert to the dangers this summit could impose on world press freedom. Source: Editor & Publisher Online -- http://ipsnews.net/interna.asp?idnews=20743 2. WSIS: Unions Want Employment Issues on Agenda Brian Thomson GENEVA, Oct 22 (IPS) - Global unions are concerned that organisers of the World Summit on the Information Society due to open in Geneva December have ignored key employment issues. The draft declaration and action plan have failed so far to acknowledge the role the Information Communication Technology (ICT) sector plays as employer, says the Swiss-based Union Network International (UNI). UNI is a global trade union for the skills and services sectors, with about 15 million members worldwide. Three million of these are in telecommunications and information technology (IT). The UNI says governments and the business community taking part in the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) have done little to push issues such as workers rights, labour standards, health and safety, and equality on to the agenda. These issues and more industry-specific issues such as universal access to communications and public investment in ICT are being pushed to the sidelines, says UNI general secretary Philip Jennings. "We are bothered about the need for the summit to address what kinds of rights and opportunities should be given to working people," Jennings told IPS. "There seems to be insufficient attention given to a lot of the aspects of labour relations as well as occupational and employment aspects." Members of international trade unions working at the WSIS under the Global Unions platform say they recognise that society is moving to a new stage in terms of organisation of work, location of work, how work is done and how businesses function. They say these issues must be addressed during the course of the summit, being organised by the International Telecommunications Union with sponsorship from the United Nations (UN). Neil Anderson, head of the telecom division of UNI says the declaration expected at WSIS has some words about the UN human rights declaration but nothing about labour rights. "Workers have to produce the things that make the information society work and they have to be recognised in the declaration and action plan," he says.. "There are some governments that don't want them in there and certainly business is opposing to some extent as well." Despite the tripartite approach of bringing government, business and civil society together at the summit, it seems that organisers are not facing up sufficiently to issues on the trade union agenda. The Global Unions group says their concerns have not been helped by the seeming determination of government representatives to keep civil society out of decision-making procedures. Until recently, UNI has been unhappy with the organisers' stand on access for participants outside of normal government representation, Jennings says. "We along with a number of other non-governmental organisations made representations to the organisers and the president of the Prepcom about how unhappy we were about how other voices were being excluded," Jennings says. "And I think they've made a pretty reasonable effort to try and accommodate this, but it still isn't working as we would like." Non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and civil society groups have been allowed an hour of informal sessions ahead of the formal sessions. But civil society groups remain frustrated over their lack of input in the overall process. "We welcome the opportunity to have the possibility to make our case heard, but it's also imperfect," Jennings says. "The danger is we could end up just talking to our own audience." Despite the moves to open up the summit process, there are still very strong fears among many within the trade union lobby that the WSIS might be headed for failure. Trade unions are worried that the World Bank-International Monetary Fund (IMF) approach to issues facing the WSIS will be swallowed whole when it comes to issues such as liberalisation, deregulation and the question whether or not public service can meet the challenges of the IT revolution. "Look at Colombia for instance, where we just had a case where the World Bank told the telecommunications carrier in the country they had to privatise," says Jennings. "That means that essentially the universal access provision is questioned." On the other hand the business community "has forgotten the society part of the information revolution," Jennings says. "This isn't just about improved IT infrastructures, this is also about what does this new world mean for people at large." The WSIS focus has been aimed clearly at bridging the digital divide, which it describes as the ever increasing gap between the technological haves and have nots. The Global Union platform believes this is important, but that the summit should focus equally on the social divide. "It's also about what people earn, where people earn it, and the conditions in which new employment opportunities are made in a new working environment," says Jennings. "We are looking for the NGO community to support us in this argument." Jennings is confident of moving in that direction. "We've got our act together, we know what we want, we're already talking to union centres around the world," says Jennings. "We have networked the network of unions, so we are pretty well prepared." Brian Thomson is also correspondent for the Infosud News Agency. (END/2003) -- Temporary Cyber Bus project Proposal of the project (debating bus, September 2003) A COMPUTER BUS TO PROMOTE THE RIGHT OF COMMUNICATION (For the World Summit of the Information Society) The idea The idea for this project was born upon the world summit of the information society, to be held in Geneva (from 10 to 12 december 2003) and on a next round in Tunis (november 2005) It is the intention of the project to promote a collective vision of the information society and to reduce the digital gap, as the summit deals with different topics of the changes in the actual society due to the impact of information and communication technologies This means that a worldwide mobilisation would be very welcome, enabling as much people as possible to join the reality of the civil society. In Italy, a platform of communication has already been created between the civil society. This platform now wants to attract the attention of the general public on the multiple legal problems concerning technology and wants to develop a way to let civil society speak out and express itself. The bus will be a very important instrument to get the attention to the summit, to the topics that will be discussed and the positions that will taken by the different actors on the field. In fact, the bus only forms part of a much larger project that is set up to promote the concerns of all aspects related to information, communication and the recognition of the communication right as a fundamental human right that is granted to all citizens. The proposal Between September and December 2003 a mobile unit will be present at several special occasions (see calendar), during the summit, and could continue its mobile presence until the second round of the summit in 2005. Special attention will go to education centres in the area of Triveneto and in the rest of Italy. The mobile unit will be at the disposal of several actors that prepare their participation to the discussion on the Wsis and all form part of the Italian platform of the civil communication society. The mobile unit will contain 10 PC plug-ins, a HIFI connection and an antenna to broadcast live images. What will the « cyber-bus » be used for ? a.. To inform about the summit of Genève : by illustrating the topics that the summit is dealing with and the risks these topics contain, by presenting the different positions, by proposing alternatives to a society that is dominated and defined by a technology that doesn't respect the human rights and the human dignity b.. To organise activities to inform, to train and to organize the civil society on issues as communication of information and knowledge. c.. To promote existing projects that enable a direct access of civil society to the production of information and the use of technologies that are under no copyright. d.. To create a convergence of alternative media, including television and radio, that shows the horizontal information society and the right of access to information and technologies under no copyright in a concrete way. What can you do on the « cyber-bus » ? a.. Follow workshops about the topics of the Wsis, and take part into debates and meetings b.. Follow the presentation of the campaigns of different groups that record and distribute audio or video, and teach the theory and practice of the different technologies that are available (Linux, stream radio, antennas.) c.. Use the material that is at your disposal to receive/make alternative information around the Wsis of Geneva and to report upon the continuation of the summit and its related activities d.. Work closely together with the different 'static' media laboratories that will be installed on different events. Provisional calendar Trento, October 2003 : public meeting on communication during the summit around the peace rally Paris, November 2003 : European social forum Geneva, December 2003 : world summit on the information society Padua, May 2004 : CIVITAS At these events, the functions of the BUS will be : A) An access point : mobile unite will be used to create a public access point to the technology of information and communication, assisted by a technical staff that will be present on the different occasions where the BUS will stop. B) A mobile education unit : short workshops on different educational levels (ranging from one hour to an hour and a half) C) Mobile production unit : a mobile unit that contains equipment to distribute information related to the different events on which the BUS will be present and function as a support to the modalities and principles of independent information. -- 4. WSIS events and information WSIS Intergovernmental Conference, Palexpo 10-12 December 2003 United Nations summit hosted by the ITU, 50+ heads of state, observer status for accredited NGOs, civil society organisation have limited speaking rights www.itu.int/wsis WSIS Civil Society Section, Palexpo, 10-12 December 2003 Civil society section at WSIS, various working groups and caucuses including human rights, community media, gender, regions, copyright, cultural diversity www.geneva2003.org (official civil society secretariat) www.wsis-cs.org (civil society plenary and caucus lists) World Electronic Media Forum, Palexpo 9-11 December 2003 Mainstream corporate and public media conference and workshops supported by EBU, International Association for Broadcasters, World Council for Radio and Television www.wemf.org ICT4D Exhibition, Palexpo, 10-12 December 2003 Exhibition of ICT for development, includes government, private and NGO stands. African Media Village and Bolivian stands will have operational community radio and telecentres. www.ict-4d.org World Forum on Communication Rights, Palexpo, 11 December 2003 Alternative forum of campaign on Communication Rights in the Information Society (CRIS) with support of AMARC, APC, WACC, Heinrich Boll Stiftung, WSIS Human Rights Caucus www.communicationrights.org Community Radio Seminar, Palexpo, 12 December 2003 Launch of La Practica Inspira, presentations on community media from Latin America, Africa, Asia, North America and Europe. Supported by AMARC, ALER, Pain pour la Prochaine, Cameco www.comunica-ch.net (details to be posted) WSIS? We seize! (dates/activities/locations to be confirmed) Counter summit and alternative events including - MakeWorld Convention, Polymedia Labs, Indymedia webcast. Organised autonomously from the WSIS www.geneva03.org, www.geneva03.net Other important WSIS news and information sites Council of NGOs news and information site on WSIS www.prepcom.net/wsis German news and information site on WSIS www.worldsummit2003.de -- 5. ** *"Weltgipfel zur Informationsgesellschaft" Genf 20003 - Tunis 2005: * *-------GEMEINSAME VISION IN WEITER FERNE--------------- * * Tagung * der Heinrich Böll Stiftung in Zusammenarbeit mit * dem zivilgesellschaftlichen WSIS-Koordinierungskreis * 1. November, 14.00-21.30 Uhr auf der Galerie * der Heinrich-Böll-Stiftung, * Rosenthaler Strasse 40/41, * Hackesche Höfe I, * 5. Etage, Berlin-Mitte * * Anmeldung: * medien@boell.de, * Anmeldeschluss: 25.10.03 * www.worldsummit2003.de * * Informationen: * Olga Drossou * Fon: +49/ 30 - 285.34-183 * *************************************************************************** *** Eine gemeinsame Vision von der Informationsgesellschaft zu formulieren ist der Auftrag der UN-Generalversammlung an den "Weltgipfel zur Informationsgesellschaft" (WSIS). Der inklusive, optimistische Anspruch der Generalversammlung wird auch darin deutlich, dass Zivilgesellschaft und Wirtschaft erstmalig in der Geschichte der UN-Weltgipfel aufgerufen wurden, sich am Diskussionsprozeß aktiv zu beteiligen. Doch kurz vor der ersten Gipfelkonferenz in Genf im Dezember diesen Jahres ist der Prozess ins Stocken geraten. Nach dem Ende der dritten Vorbereitungskonferenz (PrepCom 3) im vergangenen September erscheint ein Konsens in weiter Ferne. So mußte sich die Prepcom 3 an ihrem letzten Tag kurzfristig auf eine erneute Zusammenkunft Mitte November vertagen, um in einem letzen Versuch ein Scheitern zu verhindern. Angesichts der starken Interessensgegensätze - in erster Linie zwischen den Regierungen der Industrieländer und der Entwicklungsländer - erscheint ein Durchbruch schwierig. Wird WSIS ein neues Cancún? In der Veranstaltung werden wir die Hintergründe, (fehlende) Visionen und Konflikte beleuchten: - - Wieso werden die Menschenrechte nicht mehr vorbehaltlos von allen Staaten (wieder) anerkannt und warum sind "Kommunikationsrechte" so umstritten? - - Welche Konflikte verbergen sich hinter der Forderung nach "freiem Zugang zu Wissen und Information" und warum geben sich die Entwicklungsländer mit dem "Schutz des indigenen Wissens" zufrieden, ohne das sie benachteiliegende Copyright- und Patentsystem offensiv zu hinterfragen? - - Ist eine gemeinsame Vision der Regierungen dieser Welt überhaupt noch denkbar? "Die Visionen haben wir." Das ist die Überzeugung der "dritten Säule" des Gipfels, der Zivilgesellschaft. Sie tritt selbstbewußt und immer koheränter und organisierter auf die Bühne des Weltgipfels. Durch Expertise und visionärer Kraft verschafft sie sich Respekt und manchmal auch Gehör. Ihr Einfluss bleibt jedoch weit hinter ihren Erwartungen zurück. Vom "Input" zum "Impact" bleibt dringende Aufgabe. In Deutschland haben zivilgesellschaftliche Organisationen dem WSIS einen hohen Stellenwert beigemessen. Frühzeitig wurde ein zivilgesellschaftlicher Koordinationskreis gegründet, der den WSIS-Prozess verfolgt und mit eigenen Konzepten interveniert. Als Ergebnis eines breit angelegten Diskussionsprozesses wurde z.B. die "Charta der Bürgerrechte für eine nachhaltige Wissensgesellschaft" erarbeitet und in die Gipfeldiskussionen hineingetragen. Plattform für die Vernetzung der deutschen mit der internationalen Zivilgesellschaft ist die zweisprachige Website www.worldsummit2003.de. - - Wie verwirklicht sich der Partizipationsanspruch im Gipfelprozeß? Wie wird er auf nationaler/regionaler Ebene realisiert? Erfahrungen und Erwartungen von VertreterInnen der Bundesregierung, der Zivilgesellschaft und der Wirtschaft werden auf einem Podium gegenübergestellt. Programm - ------------------ 14.00 Uhr: Eröffnung Ralf Fücks, Vorstand der Heinrich-Böll Stiftung 14.15 Uhr: Einschätzungen eines unvollendeten Vorbereitungsprozesses Heike Jensen, Deutscher Zivilgesellschaftlicher WSIS-Koordinierungskreis, Terre des Femmes Raoul Weiler, Club of Rome 14. 45 Uhr: Europa auf dem Weg zu einer nachhaltigen Wissensgesellschaft? Reinhard Bütikofer, Vorsitzender von Bündnis 90/Die Grünen (angefr.) 15.00 Uhr: Menschen- und Bürgerrechte: Konfliktlinien im WSIS Rikke Frank Joergensen , Human Rights Institut, Kopenhagen Christin Maier, Auswärtiges Amt (angefr.) Christoph Bruch, Humanistische Union Moderation: Alvar Freude, WSIS-Zivilgesellschaftlicher Koordinierungskreis 16.30 Uhr: Pause 17.00 Uhr: Freier Zugang zu Wissen: Grundlagen für eine nachhaltige Wissenspolitik Georg Greve, Präsident Free Software Foundation Europe Werner Kannenberg, Bundesministerium der Justiz (angefr.) Rainer Kuhlen, Nethics, Universität Konstanz Moderation: Christine Wenzel, WSIS-Zivilgesellschaftlicher Koordinierungskreis 18.30 Uhr: Imbiss 19.30 Uhr: Podiumsdiskussion: Kann der WSIS noch ein Erfolg werden? Jeanette Hofmann, Vertreterin der Zivilgesellschaft in der deutschen Regierungsdelegetion zum WSIS Annette Mühlberg, Verdi Bundesvorstand Karl-Georg Schon, Auswärtiges Amt, Deutsche Regierungsdelegation Peter Pöppel, Vizepresedent Alcatel, Initiative D21 Moderation: Monika Ermert, freie Journalistin 21.30: Ende der Tagung -- 6. ALERT UPDATE - TUNISIA 15 October 2003 More hypocrisy as Tunisia hosts international congress on digital divide SOURCE: Reporters sans frontières (RSF), Paris **Updates IFEX alerts of 30 and 16 September, 25 July, 12 June, 27, 24, 13 and 5 February 2003; for further information on the Yahyaoui case, see alerts of 20 and 4 June, 13 May, 4 and 3 April, 3 February and 17 January 2003, 1 October, 21, 20 and 6 June 2002** (RSF/IFEX) - RSF has voiced outrage that an international congress on the digital divide is being held in Tunisia, a country that is assuming an increasingly important role within international bodies regulating the Internet despite the fact that it is one of the most repressive towards its own Internet users. The congress is being held in Tunis from 14 to 16 October 2003. It was organised by the World Federation of Engineering Organizations (WFEO) and is viewed as a preparatory encounter for the next World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS), the second stage of which is scheduled to take place in Tunis in 2005. "The WSIS is a major event for the Internet's development. The summit's member states must take action to prevent the Internet's future from being dictated by nations that repress freedom of expression," RSF Secretary-General Robert Ménard said. The Tunisian authorities continue to detain a cyber-dissident, Zouhair Yahyaoui. Using the pseudonym "Ettounsi", which means "The Tunisian" in Arabic, Yahyaoui founded the online magazine "TUNeZINE" in July 2001 to distribute opposition documents and thereby provide information about the fight for democracy and freedom in Tunisia. He was one of the first persons to publish a letter to the president by Judge Mokhtar Yahyaoui criticising the judicial system. Yahyaoui was arrested by plainclothes police in an Internet cafe on 4 June 2002. He was subjected to interrogation that included three sessions of "suspension", a form of torture in which the victim is suspended by the arms with his feet barely touching the ground. On 10 July 2002, the Tunis Appeals Court sentenced him to two years in prison for "distributing false news". Further evidence of the Tunisian government's cynicism towards the WSIS has been President Ben Ali's decision to appoint Habib Ammar to head the preparatory committee for the summit's second stage. As a former national guard commander and interior minister, Ammar actively participated in repression for many years. "During the period when he was interior minister, the ministry's facilities were transformed into a detention and torture centre," according to the organisations TRIAL and the World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT). These two organisations recently lodged a criminal complaint against Ammar with the Canton of Geneva's general prosecutor, but the Prosecutor's Office shelved the complaint on the grounds that the Swiss Confederation gives immunity from arrest and detention to representatives of member states of the International Telecommunications Union (ITU), which is organising the WSIS. The goal of the summit is to narrow the digital divide between rich and poor countries, but it is also supposed to adopt a declaration of principle on nations' policies towards the Internet. Many non-governmental organisations specialising in human rights issues are concerned about the current draft of the declaration, which has been heavily influenced by those countries that are the most repressive with regard to the Internet. For further information, contact the RSF Internet Desk, rue Geoffroy Marie, Paris 75009, France, tel: +33 1 44 83 84 62, fax: +33 1 45 23 11 51, e-mail: internet@rsf.org, Internet: http://www.rsf.org -- 7. http://www.helloworldproject.com/#hello -- 8. Dear All, This meeting was organised by the Panos Institute, London, in association with the Communication for Social Change Consortium and the Rockefeller Foundation. Financial support was kindly provided by the Rockefeller Foundation. The meeting was one of series of "Frati Dialogues on Media and Social Change" organised at the Rockefeller Foundation's Bellagio Conference Centre in Italy. The meeting built on work carried out at the Global Knowledge Media Forum, a joint activity between Panos and the Global Knowledge Partnership. Murali --------------------------------------------- Murali Shanmugavelan Communication for Development Programme Email: muralis@panoslondon.org.uk <mailto:muralis@panoslondon.org.uk> ---------------------------------------------- Panos Institute 9, White Lion Institute London, N1 9PD Phone: +44 (0)20 7239 7608 (direct) Phone: +44 (0)20 7239 7608 (board) Fax: +44 (0)20 7278 0345 ---------------------------------------------- Panos-London's mission is to work with the media to enable developing countries to shape and communicate their own development agendas by catalysing and promoting informed public debate. We particularly focus on amplifying the voices of the poor and marginalised. Bellagio Symposium on Media, Freedom and Poverty Statement The Bellagio Symposium on Media, Freedom and Poverty came together to explore the links between and develop a better understanding of current media trends and poverty. This meeting was in part an attempt to bridge differences in approach among organisations involved in media freedom, media pluralism and social advocacy. While we have differences in perspective, we agreed on the following points. We are particularly concerned that in the World Summit on the Information Society some of the measures being considered run counter to freedom of expression; that insufficient attention is being paid to the crucial role of the media, and to the importance of poverty reduction; and that there is inadequate mapping of development objectives against the proposed actions. We believe that urgent attention needs to be brought to bear on issues of media and poverty in ways that are rooted in the principle of freedom of expression. Freedom of expression, as expressed in Article XIX of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, is a fundamental right which underpins all other human rights, and enables them to be expressed and realised. The eradication of poverty is essential to the realisation for all peoples of the aspirations in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. People living in poverty face particular obstacles to achieving freedom of expression and access to the media which are associated with the conditions of poverty. These obstacles include economic, social, educational, logistical, and political factors. Economic obstacles include the cost of equipment for production, distribution and reception, and the costs of licences and operation; social obstacles include gender and language; educational obstacles include literacy and language; logistical obstacles include transport, physical access and electricity; political obstacles include repression and lack of will of many states to allow democratic expression and to give voice to the most marginalised groups, as well as censorship by government, commercial and social interests. The interests and concerns of people living in poverty are not sufficiently exposed in the media. Economic and market pressures on the media are tending to deprioritise journalistic investigation and reporting on issues of social and public concern. Because the poor often do not constitute a viable market, issues of concern to them are increasingly and particularly marginalised. New strategies, which address these issues and reinforce freedom of expression, need to be devised. Threats to media freedom and freedom of expression continue to come from undue political influence but we are also concerned about issues of economic control and pressure. We recognise that these obstacles need to be overcome in the interests of society as a whole, and not only because in many societies poor people are the majority. When people do not have a voice in the public arena, or access to information on issues that affect their lives, and where their concerns are not reasonably reflected in the media, development tends to be undermined and catastrophes such as famines are less likely to be averted. Lack of access to communication undermines the capacity of the poor to participate in democratic processes. Frustration and alienation over lack of means of expression lead to disaffection with the political process resulting in apathy or violence. Realisation of freedom of expression for people living in poverty requires: media pluralism and diversity, including diversity of forms of ownership; more equitable access to communication; support for cultural and linguistic diversity; and promotion of participation in democratic decision-making processes. 6. Action points * There is a growing number of initiatives taken by the media, by people living in poverty and by other actors to address poverty reduction, including issues of voice, content and access to information and communication. These should be encouraged and actively supported. Best practices should be publicised and exchanged. * Access for the disadvantaged to information and communication should be an integral part of any strategy to reduce poverty. Such a strategy should include participatory media. * Community media should be specifically encouraged, including through access to licences and spectrum allocation. Frequencies should be allocated in a balanced way amongst community, commercial and public service media. Broadcast licensing should be administered by independent and transparent regulatory bodies. * There is a need for increased resources, better coordination and targeting of training programmes; including training journalists in poverty related issues. * Involvement of media in education, and the development of media literacy, should be promoted. * Public service broadcasting mandates should include obligations to provide information and education to address issues of poverty; and to ensure that public service broadcasters provide universal service. * National communication policies should be developed that address access to communication for people living in poverty. Such policies should be developed and implemented in a transparent and participatory manner. * Professional standards and ethics of journalism, as defined by journalists themselves, should be supported and encouraged. The journalistic ethic should include sensitivity to issues of poverty. * Journalists should be provided with living standards and working conditions which enable them to realise these professional standards. * South-South and South-North exchanges between media and journalists should be encouraged, including personnel, training, equipment and content. * Support should be provided for civil society organisations in working with the media. * Mechanisms should be encouraged for making newspapers more affordable and more available to the disadvantaged, including measures to cut the price of newsprint and equipment. * The use of ICTs to provide the media with more diversity of information sources should be promoted; together with combinations of traditional and new information technologies to facilitate better access to communication for people living in poverty. * Resources should be provided, including by public authorities, to address shortcomings in communication access for those living in poverty and to remove cost and other barriers, in ways that do not compromise freedom of expression. * More research needs to be undertaken on the implications of current media trends for poverty reduction. 5th October, 2003 This statement was agreed by: Steve Buckley, President AMARC - The World Association of Community Broadcasters John Barker, Director of Africa Programme Article XIX Professor Cees Hamelink Centre for Communication and Human Rights Lindsay Ross, Executive Director Commonwealth Press Union Alfonso Gumucio, Managing Director Communication for Social Change Consortium Sean O'Siochru, Coordinator Communication Rights in the Information Society Mahfuz Anam, Editor in chief, Daily Star, Bangladesh Jean Paul Marthoz, International Media Director Human Rights Watch Mario Lubetkin, Secretary General Inter Press Service Luckson Chipare, Executive Director Media Institute of Southern Africa Wafula Oguttu, Editor in Chief The Monitor Group, Uganda James Deane, Executive Director and Conference convenor Panos Institute, London Diana Senghor, Executive Director Panos Institute, West Africa Damian Tambini, Executive Director, Programme on Comparative Media Law and Public Policy, Oxford University Denise Gray-Felder, Vice President The Rockefeller Foundation and CEO, the Communication for Social Change Consortium Mr Gerolf Weigel, Head, ICT for Development Division Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC) Mogens Schmidt, Director, Division of Freedom of Expression, Democracy and Peace UNESCO Ronald Koven, European Representative World Press Freedom Committee Guillaume Chenevière, Chairman World Radio and Television Council -- Sehr geehrte Damen und Herren, hiermit möchte ich Sie auf das Seminar "Vision Informationsgesellschaft" in der Evangelischen Akademie Tutzing vom 31.10. - 2.11.2003 aufmerksam machen. Der UN-Gipfel in Genf stellt im Dezember 2003 die Weichen für die vernetzte Gesellschaft. Wird in der digitalen Zukunft der alte Traum einer gerechten Welt endlich wahr oder reißt die Kluft zwischen Arm und Reich weiter auf? Das Seminar greift aktuelle Fragen auf und ist wahrscheinlich d a s Seminar in Deutschland zum Welt-Gipfel Informationsgesellschaft (WSIS), der vom 10.-12. Dezember in Genf stattfindet. Online erhalten Sie alle weitere Informationen unter www.ev-akademie-tutzing.de Dort "Programm", dann "chronologisch", dann "Vision Informationsgesellschaft" klicken. Hier kann man sich auch online anmelden! Bisher haben sich über 50 Personen angemeldet, darunter auch bekanntere Personen (z. B. Ernst Ulrich von Weizsäcker), 100 können es werden. Ich bitte Sie zudem, die Einladung an alle Ihre Freunde und Bekannte weiterzuleiten. Vielen Dank und herzliche Grüße, Eike Messow, Stiftung Weltvertrag -- 10. FSF/RMS @ WSIS Richard Stallman is speaking at the Scuola Superiore di Informatica e Gestione in Bellinzona on Dec. 9 afternoon, arriving there on the 7th or 8th and leaving for Geneva (and WSIS) after the conference. There RMS will be presenting his conference within the Swiss Platform of NGO for WSIS, in a conference room hall 4 (ict4d). It's organized by Ynternet.org network. See also: http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=81082&cid=7134275 "Two groups, in their own ways, are working to ensure that WSIS encourages the promotion of open source amongst its participating countries. The Linux Professional Institute [lpi.org] and the Free Software Foundation [fsf.org] are two of the many hundreds of non-governmental organizations which have received official status at the Summit. (Here is Part 1 [geneva2003.org] and Part 2 [geneva2003.org] of the complete list.) LPI will tentatively be holding a number of events at the WSIS conference in December, including an open source workshop and a certification exam lab; it is also our intention to put a Linux "live" CD in the hands of every WSIS delegate. We will have at least six people at the conference, working to ensure that the delegations are capable of overcoming the anti-open-source FUD which is no doubt going on. To that end, LPI has submitted a commentary on the WSIS activities [itu.int], now part of the official WSIS documentation, that is stirring some interest. Anyone who is interested in helping LPI's efforts at WSIS is invited to subscribe to the LPI@WSIS mailing list [lpi.org]. The FSF is participating through the WSIS Working Group on Patents, Copyrights and Trademarks [wsis-pct.org]; RMS is on the group's steering committee and Georg Greve of FSF Europe is one of the co-ordinators. 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