World Summit on the Information Society
ICTs: funding, development and democracy
28/02/2005
- Opinión
Funding for information and communication technologies -
ICTs- and development, and democracy issues in global
Internet governance, are the two central themes that the UN
will be addressing in phase two of the World Summit on the
Information Society, to take place in Tunisia next November
16-18. Beyond the technical aspects, both issues, that
were debated during the second Preparatory Committee
(Prepcom), in Geneva on February 17-25, have wide political
and social implications, that several actors in the process
have been trying to bring into the debate.
In this Prepcom, the main advancement was the draft
agreement governments reached on the issue of funding
mechanisms, which helped to break the deadlock reached at
the end of the first phase of the Summit (Geneva, December
2003); but the agreement evaded engaging developed
countries and multilateral organizations to take on new
financial commitments, in support of "digital solidarity".
The documents under discussion, to be adopted at the
intergovernmental Summit, also include a political
statement, (known as the "political chapeau") and
operational chapters, where the mechanisms and
organisational responsibilities for follow-up and
implementation of the agreement of the first phase of the
Summit will be spelled out.
Meanwhile, the principle of an information society based on
human rights is once again in question. On the one hand,
during the Prepcom IFEX launched its report on a recent
fact-finding expedition to Tunisia, that documented
systematic violations of freedom of expression. On the
other hand, at the end of the Prepcom, in a civil society
exchange on the outcomes, a number of people expressed
concern at the loss of the vision: that of a more equitable
and inclusive information society, with human rights at its
centre, as set out in the Geneva WSIS Declaration adopted
in December 2003 and the civil society Declaration.
Financial Mechanisms: no new commitments
The agreement, now almost finalized, on funding mechanisms
lists a series of challenges and options destined to
closing the so-called digital divide. These remain,
however, at the level of recommendations, with no
obligation attached. The negotiated solution on the
Digital Solidarity Fund (DSF), on which Southern
governments had hoped to get a firm commitment, only states
that the Summit participants “welcome” the voluntary
Digital Solidarity Fund.
For major telecommunications infrastructure projects, the
favoured strategy continues to be deregulation to encourage
private investment. However, the agreement does encourage
allocation of multilateral and bilateral funding for
infrastructure projects, and recognises the necessary role
of public finance in certain areas where it is hard to
attract private investment (but without clarifying where
these funds will come from).
Echoing the WSIS I Geneva Declaration and Action Plan,
there is recognition of the contribution ICTs can make
towards fulfilment of the Millennium Development Goals
(MDGs). ICTs can be an important development enabler, for
example, through better ability to access key information
and to answer crucial communications needs, in areas such
as health, education or production. The refusal to
consider new financing mechanisms could mean that the onus
of ICT development funding will shift to existing MDG
funds, in competition with other more immediate life-saving
development needs such as vaccination and clean water.
From civil society, there was criticism of the multi-
stakeholder task force on this issue, set up following the
Geneva Summit, that operated for two months under UNDP
leadership. This task force decided to limit its mandate
to reviewing the adequacy of existing funding mechanisms,
but declined to explore new options. Civil society was not
consulted on its representation and was allowed few
delegates on the force. The task force report did point to
new trends and identified some areas where present
mechanisms fail to “meet the challenges of ICT for
development”. The latter include, among others, capacity-
building programs, communications access in remote areas,
regional backbone infrastructure, affordable broadband
access, coordinated assistance for small islands and
countries, and integration of ICT (information and
communications technology) into the development sector in
areas such as health, education and poverty reduction,
issues that are echoed in the intergovernmental document.
A proposal put forward by the CRIS campaign, jointly with
other organizations, stated that information and
communications and networks should be considered a global
public good; it emphasized the centrality of the role of
public finance in the area of Information and
Communications for Development; and underlined the role of
community driven and owned initiatives, in contributing to
sustainable development and social empowerment.
Many civil society actors consider the Task Force report
could have been much more specific and forceful, which
might have strengthened arguments for greater commitment of
governments. Task force member William Currie, of the
Association for Progressive Communications (APC), in an
interview with ALAI, expressed particular disappointment in
the slack attitude of the Brazilian and Senegalese
governments, which failed to bring in to the task force any
sustained arguments or supporting data, to bolster up the
original proposal of a fully fledged international
development fund, despite Senegal being one of its main
proponents at the 1st WSIS. Both Africa and Latin America
have the expertise within civil society, yet these
governments failed to tap this expertise, lamented Currie.
The Digital Solidarity Fund is thus the only concrete new
funding mechanism to come out of WSIS, and this was on the
initiative of local, rather than national governments.
Geneva and Lyon announced it at the first WSIS (December
2003), and contributed seed funding. The novelty is the
funding mechanism. Already some 120 local governments have
voluntarily committed to including a 1% levy on all public
bids for electronic infrastructure or service projects, to
be paid by the vendor out of its profit margin. Other
local and national governments, as well as private
companies, are being invited to join, but there is no
obligation attached. The Fund is intended to support
mainly community ICT initiatives, including training,
content and other aspects; but it is not intended to solve
the major telecommunications infrastructure projects.
Internet governance
Probably the most complex issue at this Summit will be
Internet governance. It is complex because it is a new and
rapidly evolving area, because there is not yet agreement
on the scope of the issues it covers, and because of the
powerful interests involved.
Unravelling what Internet governance is or might be, what
it should and should not address, who should make decisions
and who should implement them, are some of the questions to
be addressed. For civil society organizations, the issue
has fundamental human rights implications and must be
addressed within a framework that incorporates human
rights, development and democracy as basic principles.
Governments have very differing positions on this issue,
and it is not at all clear what level of consensus, if any,
could emerge from the Summit. However, there is almost
unanimous disagreement (the US excepted) with the status
quo, in which most countries have no say in how the
Internet is managed, and where a company registered under
US law (ICANN), manages the administration of Internet (IP)
names and numbers. Under the present system, organizations
from certain countries can effectively be denied web domain
names, as a result of US foreign policy or under the
dictates of its antiterrorist legislation. In fact
unilateral control of the system in theory gives the US the
power to cut off a whole country from Internet access.
However unlikely this may be in practice, many consider
unacceptable a system that makes it possible.
Brazil’s representative to the Prepcom denounced that in
the current situation, there is an undemocratic decision-
making process on how the Net is being administered, a lack
of transparency in who is making decisions, and
insufficient participation of the international community.
The range of positions among governments varies from those
that are concerned mainly with development and digital
divide issues, relating, for example, to lower
interconnection costs to ensure better access for all; to
those that are keen to get a bigger share in the business
interests of running the networks, at present largely
monopolized by US companies. Other governments, meanwhile,
hope to increase their possibilities of monitoring or
blocking content through technical means, or to be able to
introduce regulations -something similar to the present
regime in the fields of broadcast media or
telecommunications-, by means such as national control of
registration of Internet addresses and IP numbers.
A multi-stakeholder working group on Internet Governance
(WGIG), set up as a result of the 2003 Summit, is
developing a report to be presented next July, intended to
frame discussions at the third Summit Preparatory Committee
(Prepcom), to take place in Geneva next September.
Civil society has been working actively in and around the
WGIG. The Internet Governance Caucus, set up during phase
I of the Summit, went through an extensive consultation and
nomination process to propose civil society members for the
WGIG (most of whom were accepted), with a careful
distribution by region, gender and areas of expertise.
Despite the difficulties of working in a multi-stakeholder
environment, the WGIG members are convinced that is has so
far been a positive and necessary experience of dialogue,
and allows civil society a unique opportunity to express
and detail the positions they developed at the Summit, in
an open exchange with state and private sector actors.
There is nonetheless concern among some civil society
actors that the heated nature of debate around the control
and regulatory aspects of Internet governance, such as
those mentioned above and issues such as cybercrime and
Spam, are tending to overshadow the broader but very
necessary discussions on the more enabling aspects and
social implications of Internet governance.
The IG caucus statement presented at this Prepcom, and
endorsed by the civil society Content and Themes Working
Group, addresses a number of these issues.
“The WGIG should ground its work within a human rights and
development framework. The rights to freedom of expression
and privacy are of special importance in this context as is
the need for a greater emphasis on the principles of
openness and transparency.
“The caucus believes that two outcomes of the WGIG that
will add significant value are:
1. An understanding of how governance mechanisms can
further these basic rights and principles,
2. An elaboration of the concept of democratic internet
governance which fosters the goals of creativity,
innovation and cultural and linguistic diversity.”
And the caucus enumerates among other key issues that the
WGIG will need to address:
• Unilateral control of the root zone file and its effects
for the name space
• The crucial role of technical standards in the
preservation of an interoperable global Internet
• The impact of Internet Governance on freedom of
expression and privacy
• The different implications of Internet Governance for
women and men
• The impact of Internet Governance on consumer protection
• International Intellectual property and trade rules where
they intersect with Internet Governance
• Access to knowledge as global commons.
The statement also underlines the importance, in this
debate, of giving opportunities for all concerned or
affected groups to participate and influence outcomes,
including those social groups that do not yet have Internet
access, from all regions of the world, both men and women.
Tunisia under observation:
On February 23, the worldwide freedom of expression
network, IFEX, presented a report on its recent fact-
finding mission to Tunisia. The results contained in a
report of almost 60 pages can be found on the IFEX website
(www.ifex.org)
The main findings of the mission include:
- Imprisonment of individuals related to their opinions or
media activities.
- Blocking of websites and police surveillance of e-mails
and Internet cafes.
- Restrictions on distribution of books and publications.
- Restrictions on the freedom of association.
- Restricted movement of human rights defenders and
political dissidents.
- Lack of pluralism in broadcast ownership.
- Press censorship and lack of diversity of content in
newspapers.
- Regular use of torture by the security services.
The mission has made several recommendations to the
Tunisian authorities. The paradox of holding a Summit on
the Information Society in a country where several young
people are serving 13-year prison sentences, under anti-
terrorist measures, for simply surfing the Internet, was
underlined. Tunisian human rights defenders nonetheless
welcome the Summit being held in Tunisia, as an opportunity
to bring these issues to international attention.
The Summit organizers, however, have declined to recognize
that systematic violations of the basic right to freedom of
expression in the host country is a problem for the Summit.
The Summit secretariat deemed that neither the report, nor
the Tunisian response to it, were appropriate for
dissemination on the official website or to delegates in
Geneva, as they are not directly related to the themes of
the Summit. Yet if freedom of expression is not relevant
to the Information Society, then there is certainly cause
for concern.
* Sally Burch, ALAI/CRIS
More information: http://movimientos.org/foro_comunicacion/
https://www.alainet.org/en/articulo/111468?language=en
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