Summit to harness IT revolution for poor

Summit to harness IT revolution for poor

TUNIS – A UN summit opened yesterday in Tunis with the aim of harnessing the IT revolution for poor countries, as rich nations squabble over control of the Internet and a row brews over freedom of expression in its host Tunisia.

UN Secretary General Kofi Annan, who launched the information summit process for developing nations in 2001, was due to join some 50 government leaders and about 10 000 participants at the three-day conference and trade fair. The world body’s International Telecommunication Union, which is organising the World Summit for the Information Society, has set the ambitious target of connecting all villages in the world to the Internet in 2015.The number of top-level participants has dwindled, however, and few Western leaders were expected to hear the renewed call to allow poor nations to reap the economic and social benefits of the Internet and modern telecoms.Most of the top-flight political attendance was expected to come from the developing world, including Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo, Senegal’s Abdoulaye Wade and Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez.A first summit two years ago in Geneva disappointed poor countries after rich nations failed to back a so-called “digital solidarity fund”.The fund, which is partly meant to be financed by a one per cent levy on IT services and equipment contracts, was relaunched this year with the help of some European cities and regions.Obasanjo and Wade were due to launch a public appeal for more support at the summit, the fund’s Geneva-based organisers said.It has so far gathered 5,5 million euros (N$44 million) from its 21 members.The run-up to the summit has been dominated instead by a battle over control of the Internet pitting the United States against most of the 170 other nations involved, including European Union countries.The technical root of the Internet, which is crucial to seamless global networking, is currently managed by the California-based Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), under tender from the US government.”It’s as if the national telephone networks of all the countries in the world was run from Los Angeles,” a European diplomat said.The EU, Japan, Iran and several other nations believe the time is ripe for international oversight following the relentless global expansion of the Internet and its growing social and economic importance.But Washington was firmly opposing the step as talks continued into the night, warning that regimes that do not allow freedom of speech might be in a position to have leverage over the Internet.Business groups at the summit also objected to proposed changes, saying in a statement that an intergovernmental body overseeing administration of the Internet would only “create uncertainty and hinder innovation”.Meanwhile a huge security perimeter was thrown around the exhibition hall north of Tunis, while thousands of armed police guarded key sites and crossroads throughout the Tunisian capital.Summit logos, national flags and portraits of Tunisian President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali were also draped along buildings and roads.The decision to host the summit in Tunisia prompted protests from human rights groups, including Reporters Sans Frontieres (RSF – Reporters without Borders), which accuse the Tunisian government of clamping down on freedom of speech.-Nampa-AFPThe world body’s International Telecommunication Union, which is organising the World Summit for the Information Society, has set the ambitious target of connecting all villages in the world to the Internet in 2015.The number of top-level participants has dwindled, however, and few Western leaders were expected to hear the renewed call to allow poor nations to reap the economic and social benefits of the Internet and modern telecoms.Most of the top-flight political attendance was expected to come from the developing world, including Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, Nigerian President Olusegun Obasanjo, Senegal’s Abdoulaye Wade and Venezuelan president Hugo Chavez.A first summit two years ago in Geneva disappointed poor countries after rich nations failed to back a so-called “digital solidarity fund”.The fund, which is partly meant to be financed by a one per cent levy on IT services and equipment contracts, was relaunched this year with the help of some European cities and regions.Obasanjo and Wade were due to launch a public appeal for more support at the summit, the fund’s Geneva-based organisers said.It has so far gathered 5,5 million euros (N$44 million) from its 21 members.The run-up to the summit has been dominated instead by a battle over control of the Internet pitting the United States against most of the 170 other nations involved, including European Union countries.The technical root of the Internet, which is crucial to seamless global networking, is currently managed by the California-based Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), under tender from the US government.”It’s as if the national telephone networks of all the countries in the world was run from Los Angeles,” a European diplomat said.The EU, Japan, Iran and several other nations believe the time is ripe for international oversight following the relentless global expansion of the Internet and its growing social and economic importance.But Washington was firmly opposing the step as talks continued into the night, warning that regimes that do not allow freedom of speech might be in a position to have leverage over the Internet.Business groups at the summit also objected to proposed changes, saying in a statement that an intergovernmental body overseeing administration of the Internet would only “create uncertainty and hinder innovation”.Meanwhile a huge security perimeter was thrown around the exhibition hall north of Tunis, while thousands of armed police guarded key sites and crossroads throughout the Tunisian capital.Summit logos, national flags and portraits of Tunisian President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali were also draped along buildings and roads.The decision to host the summit in Tunisia prompted protests from human rights groups, including Reporters Sans Frontieres (RSF – Reporters without Borders), which accuse the Tunisian government of clamping down on freedom of speech.-Nampa-AFP

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