| Summit
Highlights: 11 December 2003
Top-Level Experts Agree on Need for National ICT Strategies
"It is vital for national governments to establish ICT strategies",
was the overriding message of this morning's panel discussion on national
e-strategies. Speaking in the framework of the "National Strategies
for the Information Society and the Role of Regional and Global Organizations"
event, Mr Pierre Guislain, Director of the World Bank, highlighted what
he considers to be key elements of national e strategies. These include:
- Use
of a manageable set of specific and targeted goals;
- Use
of indicators to measure performance;
- Use
of benchmarks to compare the progress of the e-strategies against
time or across countries;
- Sharing
of experiences to enable comparison across countries. One example
is South Africa, which has implemented a peer review mechanism by
inviting neighbouring and other developing countries to help evaluate
the progress made in e-strategies;
- A
specialized institutional mechanism for implementation of policies.
It is noteworthy that a number of explicit
targets are laid down in the Draft Plan of Action relating to national
strategy building, including the formulation of ICT and e-strategies
and public-private partnerships. One national initiative under way in
the Republic of Estonia was also highlighted by the Estonian President,
Mr Arnold Rüütel. There, e-governance academies have been set up to
train leaders from the developing world on how to best use ICT's to
promote good e-governance. The academies bring together Estonian public
sector members, specialists from the European Union, and high-ranking
leaders from other countries around the world. Overall, across the country
"ICT's have increased democracy in Estonia by allowing more people
to participate in the decision-making process", noted President
Rüütel.
Resounding Echoes of the MDGs
Today's roundtable
on ICTs as a tool to achieve the United Nations Millennium Development
Goals (MDG) looked specifically at the linkage between development and
ICTs. The roundtable was attended by a number of high-level representatives
including Mr Leonel Fernandez Reyna, President of the Global Foundation
for Democracy and Development (FUNGLODE) (Dominican Republic), Mr Askar
Akaev, President of the Kyrgyz Republic, and Ms Tae Yoo, Vice President
of Corporate Philanthropy of Cisco (United States). Like the debate
on national e-strategies, this roundtable reached the firm conclusion
that countries need to develop national plans in order to achieve the
development goals set out in the MDGs, as well as the specific ICT targets
set out in the WSIS Draft Plan of Action.
There was some debate on whether other development priorities should
take precedence over ICTs. While some argued that basic development
needs should be taken care of first, others held that ICTs are an important
tool for boosting development on all levels.
There was agreement though, on the importance of community access centres
to expand access in the developing world. Encouraging signs are there
that new projects and partnerships, many of which are being brokered
at the WSIS event itself, are being initiated in many countries.
The linkage between the Summit objectives
and the MDGs is also examined in a new ITU publication, the 2003 World
Telecommunication Development Report: Access Indicators for the Information
Society. For further information see the website at: http://www.itu.int/ITU-D/ict/publications/wtdr_03/.
Partnerships Signed and Sealed at ITU Stand with Collaboration of Cisco
As reported in yesterday's Highlights,
today saw the signature of a number of partnership agreements between
ITU and various country and industry representatives for a series of
new development projects involving ICTs. Details of the agreements can
be found in the Press Release at:
http://www.itu.int/newsroom/press_releases/2003/34.html.
Helloworld Project is Calling
"Want to make yourself heard?"
asks the Helloworld Project website, "this is your chance to SAY
IT LOUD!" For the occasion of WSIS, anyone, anywhere, with access
to the Internet can send an e-mail message to be beamed across the world.
Helloworld, organized by the Swiss Federal Department of Home Affairs,
Federal Office of Culture, calls itself "a global collaborative
experience", enabling messages to be projected by laser beam onto
a mountain overlooking Ipanema Beach in Rio de Janeiro, onto the UN
building in New York City, onto the most prominent building in downtown
Mumbai or onto the "jet d'eau" over Lake Geneva. Messages
and images sent in are archived by the minute on the Helloworld website
at: http://www.helloworld.cc.
Youth at the Centre
Following the Youth Day held at WSIS
on 10 December (see Press Release at: http://www.itu.int/wsis/newsroom/press_releases/itu/2003/youthday.html),
today was another eventful day for
the young.
Participation of youth in WSIS is organized around a "Caucus"
with over 1 000 members from 150 countries. The Youth Caucus has been
very active at all WSIS Preparatory Meetings on the regional, national
and international levels.
National WSIS Youth Campaigns have also been under way in many countries
like Ghana, Brazil, Nigeria, the Philippines and India to initiate local
activities and projects around WSIS. At the Summit itself, the Youth
Caucus has had an ambitious slate of activities including the Youth
Day held on 10 December, the Youth HUB Exhibition Space at the ICT for
Development (ICT4D) Platform, the YCDO Awards Programme, a Youth Media
Programme, and the launch of a publication and video on best practice
Youth ICT4D projects. The WSIS Youth Caucus is facilitated by TakingITGlobal,
as part of the Youth Creating Digital Opportunities (YCDO) initiative.
Further information is available at: www.ycdo.net/wsis.
At a friendly and informal "Open House" event, the YCDO Action
Plan was presented. While the YCDO recognizes the excellent language
in the WSIS documents regarding youth and the information society, the
Youth Creating Digital Opportunities Action Plan 2004-2005 focuses specifically
on the WSIS commitment to youth in the information society.
The youthful flavour of the day continued with the launch of the new
book, Wh@t's Next, produced by Youth for Intergenerational Justice and
Sustainability. Wh@t's Next is a vibrant book showcasing the writing
of young people from around the world on key information society subjects,
including human rights and the role of ICTs in sustainable development.
Other events of the day focusing on youth included Youth ICT4D, and
Young Canadians in ICT4D. Another event focused on changing global governance,
a youth dialogue on the impact and potential of ICTs to support institutional
reform in global governance.
Global Forum on Indigenous Peoples and the Information Society
The Global Forum on
Indigenous Peoples and the Information Society (GFIPIS) is a four-day
forum held in Geneva to coincide with WSIS, which ended today with the
finalization of a declaration of indigenous peoples on the information
society. An intervention by the GFIPIS representative is scheduled to
take place during the WSIS Plenary tomorrow morning. The forum, which
aimed to cover all aspects of the relationship between indigenous people
and the information society, included discussions on the use of e-commerce
in assisting the marketing and distribution of native handicrafts, the
use of ICTs to document and archive native traditions and culture, and
the policy aspects of ICT development in territories inhabited by indigenous
people.
More information on the event can be found at: http://aboriginalcanada.gc.ca/international.html.
The Digital Divide Affects Rich Countries Too
Many speakers at the
Summit have been pointing out the urgency of addressing not only the
digital divide between countries, but also that which exists within
countries. Switzerland, perhaps a rather surprising example, has identified
its own digital divide and is striving to overcome it. In an annual
competition - called "Knights of Communication" in each of
the four Swiss official languages - awards are granted for projects
that promote the use of ICTs, particularly for social groups with low
ICT usage.
Federal Councillor Moritz Leuenberger presented this year's awards to
the Multimondo Team from Biel for their project at the Multimondo cultural
centre, which has run computer courses for children and youth from immigrant
families. A special award was also given for the "e-comunico"
project, aimed at acquainting the inhabitants of two of the most remote
parts of Switzerland, Puschlav and Bergell, with computer and Internet
applications. Further information is available at: http://www.comknight.ch/.
Ghana - an African ICT Showcase
African nations are
certainly not being left out of WSIS. One of the countries that is making
its voice heard at the Summit is Ghana. Ghana, a peaceful and stable
country in West Africa,is gearing itself up towards becoming the 'Silicon
Valley' of the region. At a WSIS press conference, the Minister of Communications
of Ghana, Mr Kan Dapaah, spoke about how the country is poised for rapid
expansion in the ICT sector, and called on investors to take advantage
of the favourable climate in his country.
The Government is building an ultra modern, fully equipped technology
park, it was reported, which it believes will catapult Ghana's ICT sector
into the twenty-first century.
In a significant initiative last week, the Governments of India and
Ghana inaugurated the Ghana-India Kofi Annan Centre of Excellence for
Communications and Information Technology in the capital, Accra. This
constitutes a perfect example of how developing countries are helping
each other bridge the digital divide, and, in the words of the UN Secretary-General,
is a "tangible contribution to the United Nations' global mission
of peace and our efforts to achieve the Millennium Development Goals".
Ghana is also home to the largest cybercafé in Africa to date, BusyInternet,
with 100 PCs available for public use.
New Report Highlights Girls in Education
UNICEF today launched
a new report on the "State of the World's Children 2004: Girls,
Education and Development". "Getting more girls into school
is the first step in reaching global development goals" said the
report's presenters, highlighting how bringing girls into education
is just a first step to bring them closer to the possibility of using
ICTs and into contact with the information society. "Knowledge
costs less the more you use it", it was argued, and "an investment
in girls' education has multiple returns".
Two-Wheeled Wireless Experiment to Connect Remote Villages in Cambodia
A motorcycle may seem
a rare exhibit at a conference such as WSIS, but in Cambodia, methods
of transportation are doubling up as ways of harnessing wireless technologies.
Bernard Krisher, Chairman of Japan Relief for Cambodia today described
a motorcycle with a rear-mounted box that is equipped to send e-mail
messages to schools. An antenna on the top of the box, and a Wi-Fi wireless
communication system inside, enable e-mails to be relayed to schools
in 13 remote Cambodian villages via satellite dishes. These villages
have no water, electricity or phones and are far from health centres,
but they now have e-mail. The schools are equipped with solar panels
to run a computer for six hours, with an e-mail link via a motorcycle
delivery system.
Every morning, five Honda motorcycles
leave the hub in the provincial capitol of Banlung, where a satellite
dish, donated by Shin Satellite, links the provincial hospital and a
special skills school to the Internet for telemedicine and computer
training. The bike drivers begin the day by collecting e-mails from
the hub's dish, which takes just a few seconds.
Then, as they pass each school and one health centre, they transmit
the messages. At the end of the day they return to the hub to transmit
all the collected e-mail to the Internet for any point on the globe.
One of the project's partners pointed out that one of the primary barriers
to rural connectivity in developing countries is cost. "We have
to provide affordable services in a country deprived of any telecommunication
infrastructure: that is why we are testing out digital applications.
Nonetheless, they have roads in Cambodia and we thought that what was
useful for commerce could become useful for telecommunications",
said Mr Hasson. The box is powered by the bike's motor, so that fuel
is used for both transportation and communication. It is hoped that
the project will catch on in other countries. More information is available
at:
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