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STATEMENT BY H. E. MR. KOFI ANNAN
THE SECRETARY-GENERAL OF THE UNITED
NATIONS
Tunis, 16 November
2005
AS DELIVERED
President Ben Ali,
Excellencies,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
I commend our hosts – President Ben Ali and the Government
and people of Tunisia -- for all they have done to make this
gathering possible. Let us remember that it was the Government
of Tunisia, back in 1998, that first proposed the idea of a
summit on the information society.
I also thank the International Telecommunication Union and
other members of the UN family for their unremitting efforts
to ensure that this process produces concrete results.
Two years ago in Geneva, the first phase of the World
Summit articulated a vision of an open and inclusive
information society. Our task here in Tunis is to move from
diagnosis to deeds.
Last night you spelt out this task in the Tunis Agenda for
the Information Society.
This Summit must be a summit of solutions. It must push
forward the outcome of the World Summit held two months ago at
the United Nations in New York. It must lead to information
and communications technologies being used in new ways, which
will bring new benefits to all social classes. Most of all, it
must generate new momentum towards developing the economies
and societies of poor countries, and transforming the lives of
poor people.
What do we mean by an "information society"? We mean one in
which human capacity is expanded, built up, nourished and
liberated, by giving people access to the tools and
technologies they need, with the education and training to use
them effectively. The hurdle here is more political than
financial. The costs of connectivity, computers and mobile
telephones can be brought down. These assets -- these bridges
to a better life -- can be made universally affordable and
accessible. We must summon the will to do it.
The information society also depends on networks. The
Internet is the result of, and indeed functions as, a unique
and grand collaboration. If its benefits are to spread around
the world, we must promote the same cooperative spirit among
governments, the private sector, civil society and
international organizations.
And of course, the information society’s very life blood is
freedom. It is freedom that enables citizens everywhere to
benefit from knowledge, journalists to do their
essential work, and citizens to hold government
accountable. Without openness, without the right to seek,
receive and impart information and ideas through any media and
regardless of frontiers, the information revolution will
stall, and the information society we hope to build will be
stillborn.
The time has come to move beyond broad discussions of the
digital divide. By now, we know what the problems are. We must
now get down to the specifics of implementation, and set out
ways to foster and expand digital opportunities.
Those opportunities are immense. Already, in Africa and
other developing regions, the rapid spread of mobile
telephones and wireless telecommunication has spurred
entrepreneurship, and helped small businesses take
root, particularly those run and owned by women. Doctors in
remote areas have gained access to medical information on
tropical diseases. Students have been able to tap into
world-wide databases of books and research. Early warning of
natural disasters has improved, and relief workers have been
able to provide quicker, better coordinated relief. The same
opportunities – and other, new ones – can be given to many
more people in the developing world.
The UN system is ready to help member states and all
stakeholders to implement whatever decisions are taken at this
Summit, including on Internet governance. But let me be
absolutely clear: The United Nations does not want to "take
over", police or otherwise control the Internet. The United
Nations consists of you, its Member States. It can want only
what you agree on. And as I understand it, what we are all
striving for is to protect and strengthen the Internet,
and to ensure that its benefits are available to all.
The United States deserves our thanks for having developed
the Internet and making it available to the world. It has
exercised its oversight responsibilities fairly and
honourably. I believe all of you agree that day-to-day
management of the Internet must be left to technical
institutions, not least to shield it from the heat of
day-to-day politics. But I think you also all acknowledge the
need for more international participation in discussions of
Internet governance issues. The question is how to achieve
this. So let those discussions continue.
This is envisaged in the agreements you reached last night
and we in the United Nations will support this process in
every way we can.
Mr. President,
The experiences of recent years – in this Summit process,
the ICT Task Force, the Working Group on Internet Governance,
the Digital Solidarity Fund, UNFIP -- the UN Office for
International Partnerships, the Global Compact corporate
citizenship initiative and other efforts -- have given us new
insights into what it takes to build effective partnerships
and platforms. UN agencies and departments continue to work
hard to build capacity, and to use information technologies to
boost our efforts to achieve the Millennium Development
Goals.
These efforts are bearing fruit. But for far too many
people, the gains remain out of reach. There is a tremendous
yearning, not for technology per se, but for what technology
can make possible. I urge you to respond to that thirst, and
to take the tangible steps that will enable this Summit to be
remembered as an event which advanced the causes of
development, of dignity and of peace.
Thank you very much.
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