Sunday Afternoon ~ 11-27-05

Note: The below is a great article by Hermano Joaquin with good insights on the 
WSIS and
related 'issues in question'.

All of us take the time to read it and should think hard about it, especially 
those of us
who consider ourselves as progressive activists with the luxury of being online 
and
working on one social agenda or another!

Let our 'live' links using the great Power of the Internet help forge solid 
chains of
humane love, reason and wisdom to create bonds of power, unity and harmony.  

 ~ Peta de Aztlan
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
http://www.periodico26.cu/english/opinion/summit112205.htm

World Summit on the Information Society: Summit without a Peak
By JOAQUIN RIVERY TUR - [EMAIL PROTECTED]  -
11-22-05

Bush didn’t go. Neither did Tony Blair. And Jacques Chirac, Angela Merkel, 
Silvio
Berlusconi and Junichiro Koizumi were all absent. The leaders from the seven 
riches
countries were not interested in the gathering. 

These are the same countries that use up the largest share of the planet’s 
energy; the
same countries that are most advanced in information and communication 
technologies, the
so called ICTs; the same countries that have failed to meet the promise of 
directing a
mere 0.7 percent of their gross domestic product to help develop nations that 
are
literally being left behind. 

Despite the fact that the event was called the World Summit on the Information 
Society
(WSIS), coverage by the mainstream media in those no-show countries was null. 
Television,
newspapers, and magazines in the First World as well as many in the Third World 
didn’t
pay any attention to the event. 

The world’s richest countries sent delegations made up of representatives 
without any
real power to implement change; delegations made up of barely a few specialists 
in the
main areas of discussion where policies were to be made.

The world’s powerful totally ignored the gathering that took place in Tunis, 
Tunisia,
from November 16 to 18. Even though for months these same countries had been 
making lots
of noise in Geneva —headquarters of the International Telecommunications 
Organization—
about how to come up with a global front to deal with the world’s widening 
digital
divide. 

Negotiators arrived in Tunis with empty hands and prolonged discussions did not 
lead to
any solutions; not that this could have been easily accomplished. Those in 
control of the
means to make some progress were not interested in alleviating the situation 
faced by the
world’s poorest nations.

Representatives from the countries looking for development opportunities found 
themselves
meeting with delegations from the G-7 countries, for example, that had 
absolutely no
power to take any sort of decisions whatsoever. Their instructions were simply 
to not
budge an inch in any of the key areas and to allow only for a few vague 
agreements
without making commitments in even the most minor areas.

It was a summit only in name, which never came close to a peak of agreements. 
The
Declaration of Principles and the Plan of Action showed some positive results, 
such as
the unification of underdeveloped countries and the rejection of unilateral 
measures in
violation of international law that impede development and impair the wellbeing 
of those
citizens in other countries. This last result aptly reflected Cuba’s call for 
the end of
the US blockade and its hostile use of radio airwaves in its aggressions 
against Cuba.   

As a result of the futility of this summit, the so-called “digital divide” will 
only
widen. If only a few weeks ago in the UN General Assembly the developed nations 
refused
to give any teeth to the commitment to halve poverty in the Third World by 
2015, if they
are completely unwilling to help poor countries develop and change the global 
rule of
neo-liberal policies, then what more could have been expected?

Those countries that use 75 percent of the world’s total ICTs continue to do 
so, they
don’t feel the slightest tinge of sympathy towards the same countries that they
themselves scupper back into the dark ages, as is the case in Africa. What kind 
of future
can there be other than a widening of the digital divide?

The Cuban delegation, headed by Cuban Informatics and Communications Minister 
Ignacio
Gonzalez Planas, raised the same point as they had in Phase One of the WSIS 
held in
December 2003 in Geneva. Namely, that humanity would not be able to move into an
information society as long as there were whole populations that suffer hunger, 
illness,
discrimination, exclusion and illiteracy. Even if granted access to ICTs, how 
is a poor
person, who doesn’t know how to read or write, going to operate a computer?

Its difficult to talk about modernizing the planet in a world where 5/6 of the 
population
is marginalized; where billions of people go hungry and don’t have the 
resources to buy
food, let alone the latest computer technologies; where people don’t have 
enough money to
heal their illnesses, or even at times, to bury their dead. The beautiful 
future that
information technicians envision, is only for the few. The rest will continue 
as always. 

Those that advocate an unlimited Information Society, do so in the midst of a 
global
neo-liberal economy designed to benefit multinational companies and 
millionaires. There
was good reason that those attending the business forum, which took place in 
conjuncture
with the summit, rejoiced when the US flat-out refused to let control of the 
Internet
pass into the hands of an international committee, thus keeping it in the 
private hands
of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (CANN). 

The cybernetic business community was overjoyed with the fact that the Internet 
would
stay in private hands and be regulated only by market terms. As usual, their 
primary
concern is business and profits. They have absolutely no interest in finding 
ways to
control the proliferation of pornography (of any kind) or of neo-Nazi or 
ultra-rightwing
websites that teach young people hate, racism and xenophobia, or how to make 
homemade
bombs and weapons. The new informatics entrepreneurs have no interest in 
slowing down the
escalation of anti-culture on the web in favor of prioritizing art, education,
enlightenment and ethics.
zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz

Related Links ~
World Summit on the Information Society
http://www.itu.int/wsis/

WSIS Documents
http://www.itu.int/wsis/documents/doc_multi.asp?lang=en&id=2266|2267

The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) 
http://www.icann.org/new.html

Domain Name Handbook: ICANN News and Editorials
http://www.domainhandbook.com/icann3.html

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Towards Harmony In the Family of Humanity!~
Peter S. Lopez {aka Peta} ~ Field Coordinator
Sacramento, California, USA
Yahoo Email~ [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.digitaldivide.net/profile/sacranative   
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Humane-Rights-Agenda/ 
http://humane-rights-agenda.blogspot.com/ 
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++


        
                
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