[WSIS CS-Plenary] CS plenary intervention
Steve Buckley
sbuckley at gn.apc.org
Thu Feb 17 17:34:07 GMT 2005
Dear all
Below is the statement I presented today on behalf of the European Caucus
for the civil society slot in the intergovernmental plenary at Prepcom 2.
There were two other interventions- from the African caucus and from an ad
hoc group on financing.
Steve
//
Mr Chairman, I represent the World Association of Community Radio
Broadcasters and I speak here today on behalf of the European regional
civil society caucus. I wish to make some general points on the Political
Chapeau and Implementation Plan and some specific recommendations on the
question of financing which is addressed in Chapter 2.
At this first substantive discussion of the Draft political chapeau and
implementation plan we wish first to remind governments of the declaration
of civil society at the Geneva Summit in 2003. In that statement, tabled at
the closing plenary, civil society organisations articulated a clear vision
grounded firmly in human rights principles and in sustainable development
priorities. We found there was a degree of convergence with governments on
the Principles but divergence in perspectives on the Plan of Action.
Government of the north and south have a responsibility to engage with
civil society to ensure effective implementation but this requires
addressing our different perspective on the Plan of Action. The Political
Chapeau and Implementation Plan of the Tunis phase is an opportunity to
retake this discussion and, in particular, to ensure that the Action Plan
and its implementation is oriented towards the implementation of
internationally agreed human rights standards and internationally agreed
sustainable development goals.
This includes ensuring that investment is oriented towards a vibrant civil
society capable of holding governments to account, defending human rights
and empowering people and communities. This includes ensuring that
commitments to 0.7 per cent development assistance are met. This includes
ensuring that aid is not confused with trade. This includes ensuring that
investment is oriented towards community-driven solutions. This includes
substantive engagement in discussion on new and innovative financing
mechanisms. This includes support for initiatives from the south such as
the Digital Solidarity Fund. This includes addressing not only the digital
divide, but also the communications divide including support for
independent and community media and other civil society communications
initiatives and appropriate technology solutions.
Government of the north must ensure that, on the principles and priorities,
they have their own house in order. Internal commitment to human rights and
social development can not be secondary to economic growth or discarded on
the grounds of national security. They should be demonstrably consistent
with external policies on aid and investment.
Governments, north and south, must ensure their approach to financing
communications for development is assessed to ensure positive not negative
impact on the realisation of human rights. It must be gender sensitive and
consider the rights of minorities. It must be rooted in the social and
economic needs of the south, especially the least developed countries and
people and communities most at risk of social and economic exclusion.
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Please note my new contact details:
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Steve Buckley
15 Paternoster Row, Sheffield S1 2BX - U.K.
Email: sbuckley at gn.apc.org
Tel: +44 114 220 1426
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www.communitymediasolutions.co.uk
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