| TUNIS AGENDA FOR THE INFORMATION
SOCIETY
Introduction
1.
We recognize
that it is now time to move from principles to action, considering the
work already being done in implementing the Geneva Plan of Action and
identifying those areas where progress has been made, is being made, or
has not taken place.
2. We reaffirm the commitments
made in Geneva and build on them in Tunis by focusing on Financial
Mechanisms for bridging the digital divide, on Internet Governance and
related issues, as well as on Implementation and Follow-up of the Geneva
and Tunis decisions.
Financial
mechanisms for meeting the challenges of ICT for
development
3.
We thank the UN Secretary-General for his efforts in
creating the Task Force on Financial Mechanisms (TFFM) and we commend the
members on their report.
4. We recall that the mandate of the TFFM was to undertake a
thorough review of the adequacy of existing financial mechanisms in
meeting the challenges of ICT for development.
5. The TFFM report sets out the complexity of existing mechanisms,
both private and public, which provide financing for ICTs in developing
countries. It identifies areas where these could be improved and where
ICTs could be given higher priority by developing countries and their
development partners.
6. Based on the conclusion of the
review of the report, we have considered the improvements and
innovations of financing mechanisms, including the creation of a voluntary
Digital Solidarity Fund, as mentioned in the Geneva Declaration of
Principles.
7. We recognize the existence of the digital divide and the
challenges that this poses for many countries, which are forced to choose
between many competing objectives in their development planning and in
demands for development funds whilst having limited
resources.
8. We recognize the scale of the problem in bridging the digital
divide, which will require adequate and sustainable investments in ICT
infrastructure and services, and capacity building, and transfer of
technology over many years to come.
9. We call upon the international community to promote the
transfer of technology on mutually agreed terms, including ICTs, to adopt
policies and programmes with a view to assisting developing countries to
take advantage of technology in their pursuit of development through,
inter alia, technical cooperation and the building of scientific
and technological capacity in our efforts to bridge the digital and
development divides.
10. We
recognize that the
internationally-agreed development goals and objectives, including the
Millennium Development Goals, are fundamental. The Monterrey Consensus on
Financing for Development is the basis for the pursuit of adequate and
appropriate financial mechanisms to promote ICT for development, in
accordance with the Digital Solidarity Agenda of the Geneva Plan of
Action.
11. We recognize and
acknowledge the special and specific funding needs of the developing
world, as referred to in paragraph 16 of the Geneva Declaration of
Principles*, which faces numerous challenges in the ICT sector, and that
there is strong need to focus on their special financing needs to achieve
the internationally-agreed development goals and objectives, including the
Millennium Development Goals.
12. We agree that the financing of ICT for development needs to be
placed in the context of the growing importance of the role of ICTs, not
only as a medium of communication, but also as a development enabler, and
as a tool for the achievement of the internationally-agreed development
goals and objectives, including the Millennium Development Goals.
13. In the past, financing of ICT infrastructure in most developing
countries has been based on public investment. Lately, a significant
influx of investment has taken place where private sector participation
has been encouraged, based on a sound regulatory framework, and where
public policies aimed at bridging the digital divide have been
implemented.
14. We are greatly encouraged
by the fact that advances in
communication technology, and high-speed data networks are continuously
increasing the possibilities for developing countries, and countries with
economies in transition, to participate in the global market for
ICT-enabled services on the basis of their comparative advantage. These
emerging opportunities provide a powerful commercial basis for ICT
infrastructural investment in these countries. Therefore, Governments
should take action, in the framework of national development policies, in
order to support an enabling and competitive environment for the necessary
investment in ICT infrastructure and for the development of new services.
At the same time, countries should pursue policies and measures that would
not discourage, impede or prevent the continued participation of these
countries in the global market for ICT-enabled services.
15. We take note that the challenges for expanding the scope
of useful accessible information content in the developing world are
numerous, in particular, the issue of financing for various forms of
content and applications requires new attention, as this area has often
been overlooked by the focus on ICT infrastructure.
16. We recognize that attracting investment in ICTs has
depended crucially upon an enabling environment, including good governance
at all levels, and a supportive, transparent and pro-competitive policy
and regulatory framework, reflecting national realities.
17. We endeavour to engage
in a proactive dialogue on matters related to corporate social
responsibility and good corporate governance of Trans-national
Corporations and their contribution to the economic and social development
of developing countries in our efforts to bridge the digital
divide.
18. We
underline that market forces alone
cannot guarantee the full participation of developing countries in the
global market for ICT-enabled services. Therefore, we encourage the
strengthening of international cooperation and solidarity aimed at
enabling all countries, especially those referred to in paragraph 16 of
the Geneva Declaration of Principles, to develop ICT infrastructure and
ICT-enabled services that are viable and competitive at national and
international levels.
19. We recognize that, in addition to the public sector,
financing of ICT infrastructure by the private sector has come to play an
important role in many countries and that domestic financing is being
augmented by North-South flows and South-South co-operation.
20. We recognize
that, as a result of the
growing impact of sustainable private sector investment in infrastructure,
multilateral and bilateral public donors are redirecting public resources
to other development objectives, including Poverty Reduction Strategy
Papers and related Programmes, policy reforms and mainstreaming of ICTs
and capacity development. We encourage all governments to give
appropriate priority to ICTs, including traditional ICTs such as broadcast
radio and television, in their national development strategies. We also
encourage multilateral institutions as well as bilateral public donors
to consider also providing more financial support for regional and
large-scale national ICT infrastructure projects and related capacity
development. They should consider aligning their aid and partnership
strategies with the priorities set by developing countries and countries
with economies in transition in their national development strategies
including their poverty reduction strategies.
21. We recognize that public finance plays a crucial role in
providing ICT access and services to rural areas and disadvantaged
populations including those in Small Island Developing States and
Landlocked Developing Countries.
22. We note that ICT-related capacity building needs represent
a high priority in all developing countries and the current financing
levels have not been adequate to meet the needs, although there are many
different funding mechanisms supporting ICTs for Development.
23. We recognize that there
are a number of areas in need of greater financial resources and where
current approaches to ICT for development financing have devoted
insufficient attention to date. These include:
-
ICT capacity building
programmes, materials, tools, educational funding and specialized
training initiatives, especially for regulators and other public sector
employees and organizations;
-
Communications access and
connectivity for ICT services and applications in remote rural areas,
Small Island Developing States, Landlocked Developing Countries and
other locations presenting unique technological and market
challenges;
-
Regional backbone
infrastructure, regional networks, Network Access Points and related
regional projects, to link networks across borders and in
economically-disadvantaged regions which may require coordinated
policies including legal, regulatory and financial frameworks, and seed
financing and would benefit from sharing experiences and best
practices;
-
Broadband capacity to facilitate
the delivery of a broader range of services and applications, promote
investment and provide Internet access at affordable prices to both
existing and new users;
-
Coordinated assistance, as
appropriate, for countries referred to in paragraph 16 of the Geneva
Declaration of Principles, particularly Least Developed Countries and
Small Island Developing States, in order to improve effectiveness and to
lower transaction costs associated with the delivery of international
donor support;
-
ICT applications and content
aimed at the integration of ICTs into the implementation of poverty
eradication strategies and in sector programmes, particularly in health,
education, agriculture and the environment;
In
addition, there is a need to consider the following other issues, which
are relevant to ICT for development and which have not received adequate
attention:
Sustainability of Information Society related projects, for
example the maintenance of ICT infrastructure;
Special needs of Small, Medium
and Micro Enterprises (SMMEs), such as funding requirements;
Local development and
manufacturing of ICT applications and technologies by developing
countries;
Activities on ICT-related
institutional reform and enhanced capacity on legal and regulatory
framework;
Improving organizational
structures and business process change aimed at optimizing the impact
and effectiveness of ICT projects and other projects with significant
ICT components;
Local government and initiatives
based in local communities that deliver ICT services to communities in
the areas such as education, health and livelihood support.
24. Recognizing that the central responsibility for coordination of
public financing programmes and public ICT development initiatives rest
with governments, we recommend that further cross-sectoral and
cross-institutional coordination should be undertaken, both on the part of
donors and recipients within the national framework.
25. Multilateral development banks and institutions should consider
adapting their existing mechanisms, and where appropriate designing new
ones, to provide for national and regional demands on ICT
development.
26. We acknowledge the
following prerequisites for equitable and universal accessibility to and
better utilisation of financial mechanisms:
Creating policy and regulatory incentives aimed at universal
access and the attraction of private sector investment;
Identification and
acknowledgement of the key role of ICTs in national development
strategies, and their elaboration, when appropriate, in conjunction with
e-strategies;
Developing institutional and
implementation capacity to support the use of national universal
service/access funds, and further study of these mechanisms and those
aiming to mobilize domestic resources;
Encouraging the development of
locally relevant information, applications and services that will
benefit developing countries and countries with economies in
transition;
Supporting the "scaling-up" of
successful ICT-based pilot programmes;
Supporting the use of ICTs in
government as a priority and a crucial target area for ICT-based
development interventions;
Building human resource and
institutional capacity (knowledge) at every level for achieving
Information Society objectives, especially in the public sector;
Encouraging business sector
entities to help jump-start wider demand for ICT services by supporting
creative industries, local producers of cultural content and
applications as well as small businesses;
Strengthening capacities to
enhance the potential of securitised funds and utilising them
effectively.
27.
We recommend improvements and innovations in existing
financing mechanisms, including:
-
Improving financial mechanisms to make financial resources become
adequate, more predictable, preferably untied, and sustainable;
-
Enhancing regional cooperation
and creating multi-stakeholder partnerships, especially by creating
incentives for building regional backbone infrastructure;
-
Providing affordable access to
ICTs, by the following measures:
-
Reducing international
Internet costs charged by backbone providers, supporting, inter
alia, the creation and development of regional ICT backbones and
Internet Exchange Points to reduce interconnection cost and broaden
network access;
-
Encouraging ITU to continue
the study of the question of the International Internet Connectivity
(IIC) as an urgent matter to develop appropriate
Recommendations;
-
Coordinating programmes among
governments and major financial players to mitigate investment risks and
transaction costs for operators entering less attractive rural and low
income market segments;
-
Helping to accelerate the
development of domestic financial instruments including by supporting
local microfinance instruments, ICT business incubators, public credit
instruments, reverse auction mechanisms, networking initiatives based on
local communities, digital solidarity and other innovations;
-
Improving the ability to access
financing facilities with a view to accelerating the pace of financing
of ICT infrastructure and services, including the promotion of
North-South flows as well as North-South and South-South
cooperation;
-
Multilateral, regional and
bilateral development organizations should consider the utility of
creating a virtual forum for the sharing of information by all
stakeholders on potential projects, on sources of financing and on
institutional financial mechanisms.
-
Enabling developing countries to
be increasingly able to generate funds for ICTs and to develop financial
instruments, including trust funds and seed capital adapted to their
economies;
-
Urging all countries to make
concrete efforts to fulfil their commitments under the Monterrey
Consensus;
-
Multilateral, regional and
bilateral development organizations should consider cooperating to
enhance their capacity to provide rapid response with a view to
supporting developing countries that request assistance with respect to
ICT policies;
-
Encouraging increased voluntary
contributions;
-
Making, as appropriate,
effective use of debt relief mechanisms as outlined in the Geneva Plan
of Action, including inter alia debt cancellation and debt
swapping, that may be used for financing ICT for development projects,
including those within the framework of poverty reduction
strategies.
28.
We welcome the Digital Solidarity
Fund (DSF) established in Geneva as an innovative
financial mechanism of a voluntary nature open to interested
stakeholders with the objective of transforming the digital divide into
digital opportunities for the developing world by focusing mainly on
specific and urgent needs at the local level and seeking new voluntary
sources of “solidarity” finance. The DSF will complement existing mechanisms for
funding the Information Society, which should continue to be fully
utilized to fund the growth of new
ICT infrastructure and services.
INTERNET
GOVERNANCE
29. We reaffirm the principles enunciated in the Geneva phase of
the WSIS, in December 2003,that the Internet has evolved into a global
facility available to the public and its governance should constitute a
core issue of the Information Society agenda. The international management
of the Internet should be multilateral, transparent and democratic, with
the full involvement of governments, the private sector, civil society and
international Organizations. It should ensure an equitable distribution of
resources, facilitate access for all and ensure a stable and secure
functioning of the Internet, taking into account
multilingualism.
30. We acknowledge that the
Internet, a central element of the infrastructure of the Information
Society, has evolved from a research and academic facility into a global
facility available to the public.
31. We
recognize that Internet governance,
carried out according to the Geneva principles, is an essential element
for a people-centred, inclusive, development oriented and
non-discriminatory Information Society. Furthermore, we commit ourselves
to the stability and security of the Internet as a global facility and to
ensuring the requisite legitimacy of its governance, based on the
full participation of all stakeholders, from both developed and developing
countries, within their respective roles and responsibilities.
32. We thank the UN Secretary-General for establishing the Working
Group on Internet Governance (WGIG). We commend the
chairman, members and secretariat for their work and for their
report.
33. We take
note of the WGIG’s report that has
endeavoured to develop a working definition of Internet governance. It has
helped identify a number of public policy issues that are relevant to
Internet governance. The report has also enhanced our understanding of the
respective roles and responsibilities of governments, intergovernmental
and international organizations and other forums as well as the private
sector and civil society from both developing and developed
countries.
34. A working
definition of Internet governance is the development and application by
governments, the private sector and civil society, in their respective
roles, of shared principles, norms, rules, decision-making procedures, and
programmes that shape the evolution and use of the Internet.
35. We reaffirm that the management of the Internet encompasses
both technical and public policy issues and should involve all
stakeholders and relevant intergovernmental and international
Organizations. In this respect it is recognized that:
-
Policy authority for
Internet-related public policy issues is the sovereign right of States.
They have rights and responsibilities for international Internet-related
public policy issues;
-
The private sector has had and
should continue to have an important role in the development of the
Internet, both in the technical and economic fields;
-
Civil society has also played an
important role on Internet matters, especially at community level, and
should continue to play such a role;
-
Intergovernmental Organizations
have had and should continue to have a facilitating role in the
coordination of Internet-related public policy issues;
-
International Organizations have
also had and should continue to have an important role in the
development of Internet-related technical standards and relevant
policies.
36. We
recognize the valuable contribution
by the academic and technical communities within those stakeholder groups
mentioned in paragraph 35 to the evolution, functioning and
development of the Internet.
37. We seek to improve
the coordination of the activities of
international and intergovernmental organizations and other institutions
concerned with Internet Governance and the exchange of information among
themselves. A multi-stakeholder approach should be adopted, as far as
possible, at all levels.
38. We call for the reinforcement of specialized regional Internet
resource management institutions to guarantee the national interest and
rights of countries in that particular region to manage its own Internet
resources, while maintaining global coordination in this area.
39. We seek to build confidence and security in the use of ICTs
by strengthening the trust framework. We reaffirm the necessity to
further promote, develop and implement in cooperation with all
stakeholders a global culture of cyber-security, as outlined in UNGA
Resolution 57/239 and other relevant regional frameworks. This culture
requires national action and increased international cooperation to
strengthen security while enhancing the protection of personal
information, privacy and data. Continued development of the culture of
cyber-security should enhance access and trade and must take into account
the level of social and economic development of each country and respect
the development-oriented aspects of the Information Society.
40. We underline the importance of the prosecution of
cybercrime, including cybercrime committed in one jurisdiction but having
effects in another. We further underline the necessity of effective
and efficient tools and actions, at national and international levels, to
promote international cooperation among, inter alia, law
enforcement agencies on cybercrime. We call upon governments in
cooperation with other stakeholders to develop necessary legislation for
the investigation and prosecution of cybercrime, noting existing
frameworks, for example, United Nations General Assembly Resolutions 55/63
and 56/121 on "Combatting the criminal misuse of information
technologies" and regional initiatives including but not limited to
the Council of Europe's Convention on Cybercrime.
41. We resolve to deal effectively with the significant and
growing problem posed by spam. We take note of current
multilateral, multi-stakeholder frameworks for regional and international
cooperation on spam, for example, the APEC Anti-Spam Strategy, the
London Action Plan, the Seoul Melbourne Anti–Spam Memorandum of
Understanding and the relevant activities of OECD and ITU. We call
upon all stakeholders, to adopt a multi-pronged approach to counter
spam that includes, inter alia, consumer and business education;
appropriate legislation, law enforcement authorities and tools; the
continued development of technical and self regulatory measures; best
practices; and international cooperation.
42. We reaffirm our
commitment to the freedom to seek,
receive, impart and use information, in particular, for the creation,
accumulation and dissemination of knowledge. We affirm that
measures undertaken to ensure Internet stability and security, to fight
cybercrime and to counter spam, must protect and respect the provisions
for privacy and freedom of expression as contained in the relevant parts
of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the Geneva Declaration of
Principles.
43. We reiterate our commitments to the positive uses of the
Internet and other ICTs and to take appropriate actions and preventive
measures, as determined by law, against abusive uses of ICTs as
mentioned under the Ethical Dimensions of the Information Society of the
Geneva Declaration of Principles and Plan of Action.
44. We also underline the importance of countering terrorism in
all its forms and manifestations on the Internet, while respecting human
rights and in compliance with other obligations under international law,
as outlined in UNGA A/60/L.1* with reference to Art. 85 of the 2005 World
Summit Outcome.
45. We
underline the importance of the
security, continuity and stability of the Internet, and the need to
protect the Internet and other ICT networks from threats and
vulnerabilities. We affirm the need for a common understanding of
the issues of Internet security, and for further cooperation to facilitate
outreach, the collection and dissemination of security related information
and exchange of good practice among all stakeholders on measures to combat
security threats, at national and international level.
46. We call upon all
stakeholders to ensure respect for
privacy and the protection of personal information and data, whether via
adoption of legislation, the implementation of collaborative frameworks,
best practices and self-regulatory and technological measures by business
and users. We encourage all stakeholders, in particular
governments, to reaffirm the right of individuals to
access information according to Geneva Declaration of Principles and
other mutually-agreed relevant international instruments, and to
coordinate internationally as appropriate.
47. We recognize
the increasing volume and value of
all e-business, both within and across national boundaries.
We call for the development of national consumer protection
laws and practices, and enforcement mechanisms where necessary, to protect
the right of consumers who purchase goods and services online, and for
enhanced international cooperation to facilitate a further expansion, in a
non-discriminatory way, under applicable national laws, of e-business as
well as consumer confidence in it.
48. We note with satisfaction the increasing use of ICT by
governments to serve citizens and encourage countries that have not yet
done so, to develop national programmes and strategies for
e-Government.
49. We reaffirm our
commitment to turning the digital
divide into digital opportunity, and we commit to ensuring
harmonious and equitable development for all. We commit to foster
and provide guidance on development areas in the broader Internet
governance arrangements, and to include, amongst other issues,
international interconnection costs, capacity-building and technology /
know-how transfer. We encourage the realization of
multilingualism in the Internet development environment, and
we support the development of software that renders itself
easily to localisation, and enables the user to choose appropriate
solutions from different software models including open-source, free and
proprietary software.
50. We
acknowledge that there are concerns,
particularly amongst developing countries, that the charges for
international Internet connectivity should be better balanced to enhance
access. We therefore call for the development of strategies for
increasing affordable global connectivity, thereby facilitating improved
and equitable access for all, by:
-
Promoting Internet
transit and interconnection costs that are commercially-negotiated in a
competitive environment and that should be oriented towards objective,
transparent and non-discriminatory parameters, taking into account
ongoing work on this subject;
-
Setting up regional high-speed
Internet backbone networks and the creation of national, sub-regional
and regional Internet Exchange Points (IXPs);
-
Recommending to donor programmes
and developmental financing mechanisms to consider the need to provide
funding for initiatives that advance connectivity, IXPs and local
content for developing countries;
-
Encouraging ITU to continue the
study of the question of the International Internet Connectivity (IIC)
as a matter of urgency, and periodically provide output for
consideration and possible implementation. We also encourage other
relevant institutions to address this issue;
-
Promoting the development and
growth of low-cost terminal equipment, such as individual and collective
user devices, especially for use in developing countries;
-
Encouraging ISPs and other
parties in the commercial negotiations to adopt practices towards
attainment of fair and balanced interconnectivity costs.
-
Encouraging relevant parties to
commercially negotiate reduced interconnection costs for Least Developed
Countries (LDCs), taking into account the special constraints of LDCs.
51. We
encourage governments and other
stakeholders, through partnerships where appropriate, to promote ICT
education and training in developing countries, by establishing national
strategies for ICT integration in education and workforce development and
dedicating appropriate resources. Furthermore, international cooperation
would be extended, on a voluntary basis, for capacity building in areas
relevant to Internet governance. This may include, in particular, building
centres of expertise and other institutions to facilitate know-how
transfer and exchange of best practices, in order to enhance the
participation of developing countries and all stakeholders in Internet
governance mechanisms.
52. In order to ensure effective
participation in global Internet governance, we urge international
Organizations, including inter-governmental Organizations, where relevant,
to ensure that all stakeholders, particularly from developing countries,
have the opportunity to participate in policy decision-making relating to
Internet Governance, and to promote and facilitate such
participation.
53. We commit to working earnestly towards multilingualization of
the Internet, as part of a multilateral, transparent and democratic
process, involving governments and all stakeholders, in their respective
roles. In this context, we also support local content development,
translation and adaptation, digital archives, and diverse forms of digital
and traditional media, and recognize that these activities can also
strengthen local and indigenous communities. We would therefore
underline the need to:
-
Advance the process for the
introduction of multilingualism in a number of areas including domain
names, email addresses and keyword look-up.
-
Implement programmes that allow
for the presence of multilingual domain names and content on the
Internet and the use of various software models in order to fight
against the linguistic digital divide and ensure the participation of
all in the emerging new society.
-
Strengthen cooperation between
relevant bodies for the further development of technical standards and
to foster their global deployment.
54. We recognize that an enabling environment, at national and
international levels, supportive of foreign direct investment, transfer of
technology, and international cooperation, particularly in the areas of
finance debt and trade, is essential for the development of the
Information Society, including for the development and diffusion of the
Internet and its optimal use. In particular, the role of the private
sector and civil society as the driver of innovation and private
investment in the development of the Internet is critical. Value is added
at the edges of the network in both developed and developing countries
when the international and domestic policy environment encourages
investment and innovation.
55. We recognize that the existing arrangements for Internet
governance have worked effectively to make the Internet the highly robust,
dynamic and geographically diverse medium that it is today, with the
private sector taking the lead in day-to-day operations, and with
innovation and value creation at the edges.
56. The Internet remains a highly
dynamic medium and therefore any framework and mechanisms designed to deal
with Internet Governance should be inclusive and responsive to the
exponential growth and fast evolution of the Internet as a common platform
for the development of multiple applications.
57. The security and stability of
the Internet must be maintained.
58. We recognize that Internet Governance includes more than
Internet naming and addressing. It also includes other significant public
policy issues such as, inter alia, critical Internet resources, the
security and safety of the Internet, and developmental aspects and issues
pertaining to the use of the Internet.
59. We
recognize that Internet Governance includes
social, economic and technical issues including affordability, reliability
and quality of service.
60. We further
recognize that there are many cross-cutting
international public policy issues that require attention and are not
adequately addressed by the current mechanisms.
61. We are convinced that there is a need to initiate, and reinforce,
as appropriate, a transparent, democratic, and multilateral process, with
the participation of governments, private sector, civil society and
international Organizations, in their respective roles. This process could
envisage creation of a suitable framework or mechanisms, where justified,
thus spurring the ongoing and active evolution of the current arrangements
in order to synergize the efforts in this regard.
62. We emphasize that any Internet Governance approach should be
inclusive and responsive and should continue to promote an enabling
environment for innovation, competition and investment.
63. Countries should not be
involved in decisions regarding another country’s country-code Top-Level
Domain (ccTLD). Their legitimate interests, as expressed and defined by
each country, in diverse ways, regarding decisions affecting their ccTLDs,
need to be respected, upheld and addressed via a flexible and improved
framework and mechanisms.
64. We recognize the need for further development of, and
strengthened co-operation among, stakeholders for public policies for
generic top-level domain names (gTLDs).
65. We underline the need to maximize the participation of
developing countries in decisions regarding Internet Governance, which
should reflect their interests, as well as in development and
capacity-building.
66. In view of the continuing
internationalization of the Internet and the principle of universality,
we agree to implement the
Geneva Principles regarding Internet Governance.
67. We agree, inter alia, to invite the UN
Secretary-General to convene a new forum for multi-stakeholder policy
dialogue.
68. We recognize that all governments should have an equal role
and responsibility, for international Internet governance and for ensuring
the stability, security and continuity of the Internet. We also recognize
the need for development of public policy by governments in consultation
with all stakeholders.
69. We further
recognize the need for enhanced cooperation
in the future, to enable governments, on an equal footing, to carry out
their roles and responsibilities, in international public policy issues
pertaining to the Internet, but not in the day-to-day technical and
operational matters, that do not impact on international public policy
issues.
70. Using relevant international
organizations, such cooperation should include the development of
globally-applicable principles on public policy issues associated with the
coordination and management of critical Internet resources. In this
regard, we call upon the
organizations responsible for essential tasks associated with the Internet
to contribute to creating an environment that facilitates this development
of public policy principles.
71. The process towards enhanced
cooperation, to be started by the UN Secretary-General, involving all
relevant organizations by the end of the first quarter of 2006, will
involve all stakeholders in their respective roles, will proceed as
quickly as possible consistent with legal process, and will be responsive
to innovation. Relevant organizations should commence a process towards
enhanced cooperation involving all stakeholders, proceeding as quickly as
possible and responsive to innovation. The same relevant organizations
shall be requested to provide annual performance reports.
72. We ask the UN Secretary-General, in an open and
inclusive process, to convene, by the second quarter of 2006, a meeting of
the new forum for multi-stakeholder policy dialogue—called the Internet
Governance Forum (IGF).The mandate of the Forum is
to:
-
Discuss public policy issues
related to key elements of Internet Governance in order to foster the
sustainability, robustness, security, stability and development of the
Internet;
-
Facilitate discourse between
bodies dealing with different cross-cutting international public
policies regarding the Internet and discuss issues that do not fall
within the scope of any existing body;
-
Interface with appropriate
inter-governmental organizations and other institutions on matters under
their purview;
-
Facilitate the exchange of
information and best practices, and in this regard make full use of the
expertise of the academic, scientific and technical communities;
-
Advise all stakeholders in
proposing ways and means to accelerate the availability and
affordability of the Internet in the developing world;
-
Strengthen and enhance the
engagement of stakeholders in existing and/or future Internet Governance
mechanisms, particularly those from developing countries;
-
Identify emerging issues, bring
them to the attention of the relevant bodies and the general public,
and, where appropriate, make recommendations;
-
Contribute to capacity-building
for Internet Governance in developing countries, drawing fully on local
sources of knowledge and expertise;
-
Promote and assess, on an
ongoing basis, the embodiment of WSIS principles in Internet Governance
processes;
-
Discuss, inter alia,
issues relating to critical Internet resources;
-
Help to find solutions to the
issues arising from the use and misuse of the Internet, of particular
concern to everyday users;
-
Publish its proceedings.
73. The Internet Governance Forum,
in its working and function, will be multilateral, multi-stakeholder,
democratic and transparent. To that end, the proposed IGF
could:
-
Build on the existing structures
of Internet Governance, with special emphasis on the complementarity
between all stakeholders involved in this process – governments,
business entities, civil society and inter-governmental organizations;
-
Have a lightweight and
decentralized structure that would be subject to periodic review;
-
Meet periodically, as required.
IGF meetings, in principle, may be held in parallel with major relevant
UN conferences, inter alia, to use logistical support.
74.
We encourage the UN
Secretary-General to examine a range of options for the convening of the
Forum, taking into consideration the proven competencies of all
stakeholders in Internet Governance and the need to ensure their full
involvement.
75. The UN Secretary-General would report to UN Member States
periodically on the operation of the Forum.
76. We ask the UN Secretary-General to examine the desirability
of the continuation of the Forum, in formal consultation with Forum
participants, within five years of its creation, and to make
recommendations to the UN Membership in this regard.
77. The IGF would have no oversight function and would not replace
existing arrangements, mechanisms, institutions or organizations, but
would involve them and take advantage of their expertise. It would be
constituted as a neutral, non-duplicative and non-binding process. It
would have no involvement in day-to-day or technical operations of the
Internet.
78. The UN Secretary-General should extend invitations to all
stakeholders and relevant parties to participate at the inaugural meeting
of the IGF, taking into consideration balanced geographical
representation. The UN Secretary-General should also:
-
draw upon any appropriate
resources from all interested stakeholders, including the proven
expertise of ITU, as demonstrated during the WSIS process; and
-
establish an effective and
cost-efficient bureau to support the IGF, ensuring multi-stakeholder
participation.
79. Diverse matters relating to Internet Governance would continue to
be addressed in other relevant fora.
80. We encourage
the development of multi-stakeholder
processes at the national, regional and international levels to discuss
and collaborate on the expansion and diffusion of the Internet as a means
to support development efforts to achieve internationally-agreed
development goals and objectives, including the Millennium Development
Goals.
81. We reaffirm our commitment
to the full implementation of the
Geneva Principles.
82. We welcome the generous offer of the Government of Greece to
host the first meeting of the IGF in Athens no later than 2006 and we
call upon the UN Secretary-General to extend invitations to all
stakeholders and relevant parties to participate at the inaugural meeting
of the IGF.
Implementation and
Follow-up
83. Building an inclusive development-oriented
Information Society will require unremitting multi-stakeholder effort.
We thus commit ourselves to remain fully engaged—nationally,
regionally and internationally—to ensure sustainable implementation and
follow-up of the outcomes and commitments reached during the WSIS process
and its Geneva and Tunis phases of the Summit. Taking into account the
multifaceted nature of building the Information Society, effective
cooperation among governments, private sector, civil society and the
United Nations and other international organizations, according to their
different roles and responsibilities and leveraging on their expertise, is
essential.
84. Governments and other stakeholders should identify those areas
where further effort and resources are required, and jointly identify, and
where appropriate develop, implementation strategies, mechanisms and
processes for WSIS outcomes at international, regional, national and local
levels, paying particular attention to people and groups that are still
marginalized in their access to and utilization of ICTs.
85. Taking into consideration the leading role of governments in
partnership with other stakeholders in implementing the WSIS outcomes,
including the Geneva Plan of Action, at the national level,
we encourage those governments that have not yet done so to
elaborate, as appropriate, comprehensive, forward looking and sustainable
national e-strategies, including ICT strategies and sectoral e-strategies
as appropriate, as an integral part of national development plans and
poverty reduction strategies, as soon as possible and before
2010.
86. We support regional and international integration efforts
aimed at building a people-centred, inclusive and development-oriented
Information Society, and we reiterate that strong cooperation
within and among regions is indispensable to support knowledge-sharing.
Regional cooperation should contribute to national capacity-building and
to the development of regional implementation strategies.
87. We affirm that the exchange of
views and sharing of effective practices and resources is essential to
implementing the outcomes of WSIS at the regional and international
levels. To this end, efforts should be made to provide and share, among
all stakeholders, knowledge and know-how, related to the design,
implementation, monitoring and evaluation of e-strategies and policies, as
appropriate. We recognize as fundamental elements to bridge the
digital divide in developing countries, in a sustainable way, poverty
reduction, enhanced national capacity-building and the promotion of
national technological development.
88. We reaffirm that through the international cooperation of
governments and the partnership of all stakeholders, it will be possible
to succeed in our challenge of harnessing the potential of ICTs as a tool,
at the service of development, to promote the use of information and
knowledge to achieve the internationally-agreed development goals and
objectives, including the Millennium Development Goals, as well as to
address the national and local development priorities, thereby further
improving the socio- economic development of all human beings.
89. We are
determined to improve international,
regional and national connectivity and affordable access to ICTs and
information through an enhanced international cooperation of all
stakeholders that promotes technology exchange and technology transfer,
human resource development and training, thus increasing the capacity of
developing countries to innovate and to participate fully in, and
contribute to, the Information Society.
90. We reaffirm our commitment
to providing equitable access to
information and knowledge for all, recognizing the role of ICTs for
economic growth and development. We are committed to working
towards achieving the indicative targets, set out in the Geneva Plan of
Action, that serve as global references for improving connectivity and
universal, ubiquitous, equitable, non-discriminatory and affordable
access to, and use of ICTs, considering different national
circumstances, to be achieved by 2015, and to using ICTs, as a tool to
achieve the internationally-agreed development goals and objectives,
including the Millennium Development Goals, by:
-
mainstreaming and aligning
national e-strategies, across
local, national, and regional action plans, as appropriate and in
accordance with local and national development priorities, with in-built
time-bound measures;
-
developing and
implementing enabling policies that
reflect national realities and that promote a supportive international
environment, foreign direct investment as well as the mobilization of
domestic resources, in order to promote and foster entrepreneurship,
particularly Small, Medium and Micro Enterprises (SMMEs), taking into
account the relevant market and cultural contexts. These policies should
be reflected in a transparent, equitable regulatory framework to create
a competitive environment to support these goals and strengthen economic
growth;
-
building ICT
capacity for all and confidence in
the use of ICTs by all — including youth, older persons, women,
indigenous peoples, people with disabilities, and remote and rural
communities — through the improvement and delivery of relevant education
and training programmes and systems including lifelong and distance
learning;
-
implementing effective
training and education, particularly in ICT science and
technology, that motivates and promotes participation and active
involvement of girls and women in the decision-making process of
building the Information Society;
-
paying special attention to
the formulation of universal design concepts and the use of assistive technologies that
promote access for all persons including those with disabilities;
-
promoting public policies
aimed at providing affordable access at all levels, including community-level,to hardware as well as
software and connectivity through an increasingly converging
technological environment, capacity-building and local content;
-
improving access to the
world's health knowledge and
telemedicine services, in particular in areas such as global cooperation
in emergency response, access to and networking among health
professionals to help improve quality of life and environmental
conditions;
-
building ICT
capacities to improve access and
use of postal networks and services;
-
using ICTs to improve access
to agricultural knowledge, combat
poverty, and support production of and access to locally-relevant
agriculture-related content;
-
developing and implementing
e-government applications based on
open standards in order to enhance the growth and interoperability of
e-government systems, at all levels, thereby furthering access to
government information and services, and contributing to building ICT
networks and developing services that are available anywhere and
anytime, to anyone and on any device;
-
supporting educational,
scientific, and cultural institutions, including
libraries, archives and museums, in their role of developing, providing
equitable, open and affordable access to, and preserving diverse and
varied content, including in digital form, to support informal and
formal education, research and innovation; and in particular supporting
libraries in their public service role of providing free and equitable
access to information and of improving ICT literacy and community
connectivity, particularly in underserved communities;
-
enhancing the capacity of
communities in all regions to
develop content in local and/or indigenous languages;
-
strengthening the creation of
quality e-content, on national,
regional and international levels;
-
promoting the use of
traditional and new media in order
to foster universal access to information, culture and knowledge for all
people, especially vulnerable populations and populations in developing
countries and using, inter alia, radio and television as
educational and learning tools;
-
Reaffirming the independence,
pluralism and diversity of media, and freedom of
information including through, as
appropriate, the development of domestic legislation. We reiterate our
call for the responsible use and treatment of information by the media
in accordance with the highest ethical and professional standards. We
reaffirm the necessity of reducing international imbalances affecting
the media, particularly as regards infrastructure, technical resources
and the development of human skills. These reaffirmations are made with
reference to Geneva Declaration of Principles paragraphs 55 to
59.
-
strongly encouraging ICT
enterprises and entrepreneurs to develop and use environment-friendly
production processes in order to
minimize the negative impacts of the use and manufacture of ICTs and
disposal of ICT waste on people and the environment. In this context, it
is important to give particular attention to the specific needs of the
developing countries;
-
incorporating regulatory,
self-regulatory, and other effective policies and frameworks to protect
children and young people from
abuse and exploitation through ICTs into national plans of action and
e-strategies;
-
promoting the development of
advanced research networks, at
national, regional and international levels, in order to improve
collaboration in science, technology and higher education;
-
promoting voluntary service, at
the community level, to help maximize the developmental impact of ICTs;
-
promoting the use of ICTs to
enhance flexible ways of working,
including teleworking, leading to greater productivity and job
creation.
91. We
recognize the intrinsic relationship
between disaster reduction, sustainable development and the eradication of
poverty and that disasters seriously undermine investment in a very short
time and remain a major impediment to sustainable development and poverty
eradication. We are clear as to the important enabling role of ICTs
at the national, regional and international levels including:
-
Promoting technical cooperation
and enhancing the capacity of countries, particularly developing
countries, in utilizing ICT tools for disaster early warning, management
and emergency communications, including dissemination of understandable
warnings to those at risk;
-
Promoting regional and international cooperation for easy access
to and sharing of information for disaster management, and exploring
modalities for the easier participation of developing
countries;
-
Working expeditiously towards
the establishment of standards-based monitoring and worldwide
early-warning systems linked to national and regional networks and
facilitating emergency disaster response all over the world,
particularly in high-risk regions.
92. We encourage countries,
including all other interested parties, to make available child helplines,
taking into account the need for mobilization of appropriate
resources. For this purpose, easy-to-remember numbers, accessible
from all phones and free of charge, should be made available.
93. We seek to digitize our historical data and cultural heritage
for the benefit of future generations. We encourage effective
information management policies in the public and private sectors,
including the use of standards-based digital archiving and innovative
solutions to overcome technological obsolescence, as a means to ensure
long-term preservation of, and continued access to,
information.
94. We acknowledge that everyone
should benefit from the potential that the Information Society offers.
Therefore, we invite governments to assist, on a voluntary basis,
those countries affected by any unilateral measure not in accordance with
international law and the Charter of the United Nations that impedes the
full achievement of economic and social development by the population of
the affected countries, and that hinders the well-being of their
population.
95. We call
upon international and intergovernmental organizations to develop,
within approved resources, their policy analysis and capacity-building
programmes, based on practical and replicable experiences of ICT matters,
policies and actions that have led to economic growth and poverty
alleviation, including through the improved competitiveness of
enterprises.
96. We recall the importance of creating a trustworthy,
transparent and non-discriminatory legal, regulatory and policy
environment. To that end, we reiterate that ITU and other regional
Organizations should take steps to ensure rational, efficient and economic
use of, and equitable access to, the radio-frequency spectrum by all
countries, based on relevant international agreements.
97. We acknowledge that multi-stakeholder participation is
essential to the successful building of a people-centred, inclusive and
development-oriented information society and that governments could play
an important role in this process. We underline that the
participation of all stakeholders in implementing WSIS outcomes, and
following them up on national, regional and international levels with the
overarching goal of helping countries to achieve internationally-agreed
development goals and objectives, including the Millennium Development
Goals, is key to that success.
98. We
encourage strengthened and continuing
co-operation between and among stakeholders to ensure effective
implementation of the Geneva and Tunis outcomes, for instance through the
promotion of national, regional and international multi-stakeholder
partnerships including Public Private Partnerships (PPPs), and the
promotion of national and regional multi-stakeholder thematic platforms,
in a joint effort and dialogue with developing and less developed
countries, development partners and actors in the ICT sector. In
that respect, we welcome partnerships such as the ITU-led "Connect
the World" initiative.
99. We agree to ensure the sustainability of progress towards
the goals of WSIS after the completion of its Tunis phase and we
decide, therefore, to establish a mechanism for implementation and
follow-up at national, regional and international levels.
100. At the national level, based on the WSIS outcomes, we
encourage governments, with the participation of all stakeholders and
bearing in mind the importance of an enabling environment, to set up a
national implementation mechanism, in which:
-
National e-strategies, where
appropriate, should be an integral part of national development plans,
including Poverty Reduction Strategies, aiming to contribute to the
achievement of internationally-agreed development goals and objectives,
including the Millennium Development Goals;
-
ICTs should be fully
mainstreamed into strategies for Official Development Assistance (ODA)
through more effective information-sharing and co-ordination among
development partners, and through analysis and sharing of best practices
and lessons learned from experience with ICT for development programmes;
-
Existing bilateral and
multilateral technical assistance programmes, including those under the
UN Development Assistance Framework, should be used whenever appropriate
to assist governments in their implementation efforts at the national
level;
-
Common Country Assessment
reports should contain a component on ICT for development.
101. At the regional level:
-
Upon request from governments,
regional inter-governmental Organizations in collaboration with other
stakeholders should carry out WSIS implementation activities, exchanging
information and best practices at the regional level, as well as
facilitating policy debate on the use of ICT for development, with a
focus on attaining the internationally-agreed development goals and
objectives, including the Millennium Development Goals;
-
UN Regional Commissions, based
on request of Member States and within approved budgetary resources, may
organize regional WSIS follow-up activities in collaboration with
regional and sub-regional Organizations, with appropriate frequency, as
well as assisting members states with technical and relevant information
for the development of regional strategies and the implementation of the
outcomes of regional conferences;
-
We
consider a multi-stakeholder approach and the
participation in regional WSIS implementation activities by the private
sector, civil society, and the United Nations and other international
organizations to be essential.
102. At the international
level, bearing in mind the importance of the enabling
environment:
-
Implementation and follow-up
of the outcomes of the Geneva and Tunis
phases of the Summit should take into account the main themes and action
lines in the Summit documents;
-
Each UN agency should act
according to its mandate and competencies, and pursuant to decisions of
their respective governing bodies, and within existing approved
resources;
-
Implementation and follow-up
should include inter-governmental and multi-stakeholder
components.
103. We invite UN agencies and other intergovernmental
organizations, in line with UNGA Resolution 57/270 B, to
facilitate activities among different stakeholders, including civil
society and the business sector, to help national governments in their
implementation efforts. We request the UN Secretary-General,
in consultation with members of the UN system Chief Executives Board for
coordination (CEB), to establish within the CEB, a UN group on the
Information Society consisting of the relevant UN bodies and Organizations
with the mandate to facilitate the implementation of WSIS outcomes and to
suggest to CEB that, in considering lead agency(ies) of this group, it
takes into consideration the experience of and activities in the WSIS
process undertaken by ITU, UNESCO and UNDP.
104. We further
request the UN Secretary-General to
report to the UNGA through ECOSOC by June 2006, on the
modalities of the interagency coordination of the implementation of WSIS
outcomes including recommendations on the follow up process.
105. We request that ECOSOC oversees the system- wide
follow-up of the Geneva and Tunis outcomes of WSIS. To this end, we
request that ECOSOC, at its substantive session of 2006, reviews the
mandate, agenda and composition of the Commission on Science and
Technology for Development (CSTD), including considering the strengthening
of the Commission, taking into account the multi-stakeholder
approach.
106. WSIS
implementation and follow-up should be an integral part of the UN
integrated follow-up to major UN conferences and should contribute to the
achievement of internationally-agreed development goals and objectives,
including the Millennium Development Goals. It should not require the
creation of any new operational bodies.
107. International and regional
Organizations, should assess and report regularly on universal
accessibility of nations to ICTs, with the aim of creating equitable
opportunities for the growth of ICT sectors of developing countries.
108. We attach great importance to
multi-stakeholder implementation at the international level, which should
be organised taking into account the themes and action lines in the Plan
of Action, and moderated or facilitated by UN agencies when appropriate.
An Annex to this document offers an indicative and non exhaustive list of
facilitators/moderators for the action lines of the Geneva Plan of Action.
109. The experience of, and the
activities undertaken by, UN agencies in the WSIS process—notably ITU,
UNESCO and UNDP—should continue to be used to their fullest extent. These
three agencies should play leading facilitating roles in the
implementation of the Plan of Action and organise a meeting of
moderators/facilitators of action lines, as mentioned in the Annex.
110. The coordination of
multi-stakeholder implementation activities would help to avoid
duplication of activities. This should include, inter alia,
information exchange, creation of knowledge, sharing of best practices,
and assistance in developing multi-stakeholder and public/private
partnerships.
111. We request United
Nations General Assembly (UNGA) to make an overall review of the
implementation of WSIS outcomes in 2015.
112. We call for periodic
evaluation, using an agreed methodology, such as described in paragraphs
113-120.
113. Appropriate indicators and
benchmarking, including community connectivity indicators, should clarify
the magnitude of the digital divide, in both its domestic and
international dimensions, and keep it under regular assessment, and
tracking global progress in the use of ICTs to achieve
internationally-agreed development goals and objectives, including the
Millennium Development Goals.
114. The development of ICT
indicators is important for measuring the digital divide. We note
the launch, in June 2004, of the Partnership on Measuring ICT for
Development, and its efforts:
-
to develop a common set of core
ICT indicators; to increase the availability of internationally
comparable ICT statistics as well as to establish a mutually-agreed
framework for their elaboration, for further consideration and decision
by the UN Statistical Commission;
-
to promote capacity building in
developing countries for monitoring the Information Society;
-
to assess the current and
potential impact of ICTs on development, poverty reduction;
-
to develop specific
gender-disaggregated indicators to measure the digital divide in its
various dimensions.
115. We also
note the launch of the ICT
Opportunity Index and the Digital Opportunity Index,
which will build upon the common set of core ICT indicators as they were
defined within the Partnership on Measuring the ICT for
Development.
116. We stress that all
indices and indicators must take into account different levels of
development and national circumstances.
117. The further development of
these indicators should be undertaken in a collaborative, cost-effective
and non-duplicative fashion.
118. We invite the
international community to strengthen the statistical capacity of
developing countries by giving appropriate support at national and
regional levels.
119. We commit ourselves to review and follow-up progress in
bridging the digital divide, taking into account the different levels of
development among nations, so as to achieve the internationally-agreed
development goals and objectives, including the Millennium Development
Goals, assessing the effectiveness of investment and international
cooperation efforts in building the Information Society, identifying gaps
as well as deficits in investment and devising strategies to address
them.
120. The sharing of information
related to the implementation of WSIS outcomes is an important element of
evaluation. We note with appreciation the report on the Stocktaking
of WSIS-related activities, which will serve as one of the valuable tools
for assisting with the follow-up, beyond the conclusion of the Tunis Phase
of the Summit, as well as the "Golden Book" of initiatives launched
during the Tunis phase. We encourage all WSIS stakeholders to
continue to contribute information on their activities to the public WSIS
stocktaking database, maintained by ITU. In this regard, we invite
all countries to gather information at the national level with the
involvement of all stakeholders, to contribute to the
stocktaking.
121. There is a need to build more
awareness on the Internet in order to make it a global facility which is
truly available to the public. We call upon the United Nations General
Assembly to declare 17 May as World Information Society Day to help to
raise awareness, on an annual basis, of the importance of this global
facility, on the issues dealt with in the Summit, especially the
possibilities that the use of ICT can bring for societies and economies,
as well as of ways to bridge the digital divide.
122. We request the
Secretary-General of the Summit to report to the General Assembly of the
United Nations on its outcome, as requested in United Nations General
Assembly Resolution 59/220.
Annex
| Action Line
|
Possible
moderators/facilitators |
| С1. The role of public governance
authorities and all stakeholders in the promotion of ICTs for
development |
ECOSOC/UN Regional
Commissions/ITU |
| С2. Information and communication
infrastructure |
ITU |
| C3. Access to information and
knowledge |
ITU/UNESCO |
| C4. Capacity building |
UNDP/UNESCO/ITU/UNCTAD |
| C5. Building confidence and
security in the use of ICTs |
ITU |
| C6. Enabling environment
|
ITU/UNDP/UN REGIONAL
COMMISSIONS/UNCTAD |
C7. ICT Applications
- E-government
- E-business
- E-learning
- E-health
- E-employment
- E-environment
- E-agriculture
- E-science
|
- UNDP/ITU
- WTO/UNCTAD/ITU/UPU
- UNESCO/ITU/UNIDO
- WHO/ITU
- ILO/ITU
- WHO/WMO/UNEP/UN-Habitat/ITU/ICAO
- FAO/ITU
- UNESCO/ITU/UNCTAD
|
| C8. Cultural diversity and
identity, linguistic diversity and local content |
UNESCO |
| C9. Media |
UNESCO |
| C10. Ethical dimensions of the
Information Society |
UNESCO/ECOSOC |
| C11. International and regional
cooperation |
UN Regional Commissions/
UNDP/ITU/UNESCO/ECOSOC |
* For
reference, Paragraph 16 of the Geneva Declaration of Principles reads as
follows: We continue to pay special attention to the particular
needs of people of developing countries, countries with economies in
transition, Least Developed Countries, Small Island Developing States,
Landlocked Developing Countries, Highly Indebted Poor Countries, countries
and territories under occupation, countries recovering from conflict and
countries and regions with special needs as well as to conditions that
pose severe threats to development, such as natural
disasters. |