[WSIS CS-Plenary] Endorse: CS Statement on Declaration
karen banks
karenb at gn.apc.org
Mon Sep 22 14:22:31 BST 2003
hi all
Below is a text version of the CS Statement on the declaration. As we have
not been able to consult again with caucuses and working groups on the
final version, we haven't referred endorsements explicitly.
We have tried our best to incorporate the additional comments received, but
in doing so, have also had to cut some of the original text.. apologies to
those whose comments were received too late for inclusion..
French and spanish versions will be posted soon..
post your endorsements to the plenary list.. (without re-quoting the entire
text)
karen
======
Statement of the Civil Society in Response to the WSIS Draft Declaration
Presentation to Sub-Committee 2, September 22nd.
My name is Natasha Primo delegated by the civil society content and themes
group.
We, representatives from civil society, express our grave concern in
response to the Draft Declaration issued on 19th September 2003.
The information society described in the document is characterized by
uniformity, technocracy and bargaining. It lacks any vision that is people
and citizen centered: there is little or no mention of the poor, workers
and marginalized groups including indigenous people, refugees, people with
disabilities. The emphasis on diversity of peoples, cultures and ways of
living is still far from sufficient. Our contributions throughout this
process of shaping a common vision of an inclusive, democratic and
sustainable information society, have not been given serious consideration.
We have two overarching concerns:
· Although the principles of the UDHR and the Millenium Development
Declaration are referred to prominently at the start of the Declaration,
subsequent paragraphs do not demonstrate genuine commitment to upholding
these principles in the realization of an Information Society. Existing
rights, such as Article 19, should be quoted fully and affirmed rather than
cut up in pieces according to individual country preferences.
· Some core concerns have been formulated in ways that fundamentally alter
their meaning, whilst others raised by civil society over the past 18
months have been removed.
Specifically:
1. Community media as a concept is missing from the document. This
indicates a complete disregard of the value of such alternative media in
promoting public participation and strengthening cultural and linguistic
diversity.
2. Literacy, education and research - fundamental components of the
information and knowledge society cannot be confined to one section of
capacity building. Universal education is a key principle for building a
participative society.
3. Capacity Building must include not only skills to use ICT`s but also
include skills for creating, innovating and enabling active citizenship. It
should also recognize fundamental rights in the workplace and core labour
standards for all who work in the Information Society.
4. The value and benefits of Free and Open Source Software are not
adequately recognized nor promoted in this document, thus undermining their
real potential. These extend far beyond the concept of affordability.
5. The section on Enabling Environment speaks of a regulatory and
legislative environment that reinforces the advancement of a market-driven
industry at the expense of the citizenry.
6. The reference to Intellectual Property Rights manipulates the notion of
fair balance. It threatens innovation, the public domain, and citizens
rights and promotes the further concentration of wealth and power in the
hands of the resource rich. Legal environments and economic means should be
setup for Public libraries, schools and universities in order to enrich the
public domain and facilitate the free and open circulation of scientific
publications.
7. The role of civil society in relation to Internet governance, is
completely negated whilst increased powers of control are extended to
governments and the private sector.
8. Discussions in relation to Building Confidence, Trust and Security have
shifted to a highly politicized agenda, characterized by language referring
to the integrity of the military field and the use of information resources
for criminal and terrorist purposes. This is at the expense of citizen's
rights including freedom of association, movement, expression, and privacy.
9. References to women still fail to recognize them as key actors in
building an information society. The Declaration must avoid language that
couches women as 'wards' and must focus on the importance of women as
primary change agents.
10. In addition, references to the role of the Information Society in
ensuring the furthering of commitments made in previous UN conferences are
given little, if any, mention in this document.
The document as it currently stands reinforces the unequal balance of
powers and of development between and within nations, rather than
redressing it. We demand that governments maintain a strong human
development focus and prevent the growing control of international
governance processes by market-led forces.
This is not a document that Civil society can endorse and we question the
degree of support that will emerge amongst all stakeholders.
As it stands, the current document will only succeed in reaching a
consensus amongst the elite.
----
Prepared by the Civil Society Content and Themes group, mandated by the
Civil Society Plenary on 22nd September.
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