Michael Gurstein on Wed, 10 Jul 2002 03:10:01 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-bold] Statement: Civil Society and the World Summit on the Information Society |
From: "Bruce Girard" <bgirard@comunica.org Date: Fri, 5 Jul 2002 23:23:00 +0200 This is the statement that I made at the press conference this afternoon. bg Statement by Bruce Girard, co-chair of the civil society plenary at PrepCom1 and member of the Coordinating Committee of the Campaign for Communication Rights in the Information Society (CRIS) to the WSIS Civil Society Press Conference - July 5, 2002 More than 150 people, representing some 100 civil society organisations from all over the globe, with diverse interests, activities and priorities came to Geneva to participate in the first Preparatory Committee of the World Summit on the Information Society. Civil society organisations have been working on issues of concern to this summit for many years. NGO networks were the first to provide email and internet connectivity in many less-industrialised countries. NGOs provided the connectivity for the UN Earth Summit in Rio in 1992 and for the Cairo Summit in 1994. We have unique and valuable experience with issues relating to the use of ICTs for development, and we have long been recognised for our on-the-ground expertise in areas such as technology, policy development and project implementation, and for our work with communities at the grassroots, especially with priority sectors such as women, youth and the poor. In the areas of culture and communication, NGOs have been leaders in promoting and supporting cultural and linguistic diversity, pluralism, democracy, freedom of expression and human rights. We came to the PrepCom because the issues related to the promised information society are fundamental to our concerns for social, economic, and human development, and because we believe that a vision of a people- centred information society can only be achieved with the full and active participation of civil society. We also came here because statements made by the UN Secretary-General, Kofi Annan, and declarations and official documents issued by the United Nations, the ITU and the WSIS Secretariat repeatedly emphasised the need for the full participation of NGOs and civil society. During the past week we were actively involved in all proceedings open to us - monitoring, debating, responding to proposals and questions from national delegations, formulating positions, lobbying, and, when the opportunity was presented, intervening in the formal proceedings of the PrepCom. We have also been active in the months leading up to the PrepCom, including the African regional preparatory meeting, a series of UNESCO NGO consultations on the WSIS, and various seminars and meetings such as the one organised jointly by the Communications Rights in the Information Society campaign and the Friedrich Ebert Foundation in Geneva last November. Major decisions faced by government had to do with how we would be able to participate in the official process, including such things as how and how often we would be able to address official sessions. However, the results of three days of meetings behind closed doors leave us with serious reservations. We had hoped for innovation. In their most optimistic interpretation, the agreements reached here represent a variation on established practices, but nothing in the way of positive innovation. Other interpretations see the decisions reached here as a major setback - eroding rights and responsibilities won by civil society in the UN system over the past fifty years. Encouraged by the various declarations, announcements and official documents, we had hoped to be able to contribute to the process by participating in the organising bureau, joining in formal and informal agenda discussions, and having a voice in decisions concerning the ongoing participation of civil society in the process. We hoped to be able to actively contribute new ideas to the partnership we were invited to join. What we got was disappointing. We will not be able to participate as observers in the bureau. We can be excluded from participation in the agenda development. We have no guarantee of inclusion in significant aspects of the formal process. We are particularly disturbed by the possible precedent of accrediting individual firms to UN summits. The private sector has always been capably represented by its trade and industry associations, accredited by the UN as NGOs, but this summit is also proposing the formal accreditation of Individual firms, responsible primarily to their shareholders or individual owners. A decision to include individual commercial actors in this manner in a UN summit, without the appropriate discussion and reference to established procedures, is unprecedented and we will be challenging it at the highest levels of the UN system. We have decided to continue to engage with this process, but will be evaluating this decision while we proceed with our challenge and in the expectation that the restrictive rules and procedures adopted this week will be reconsidered at PrepCom2. July 5, 2002 _ _______________________________________________ Nettime-bold mailing list Nettime-bold@nettime.org http://amsterdam.nettime.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/nettime-bold