World Telecommunication Day 17 May 2005
"Creating an equitable Information Society: Time for Action"
Message by Mr Yoshio UTSUMI
Secretary-General International Telecommunication Union
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Dear Friends,
Human communication has always been a combination of intellect and emotion —
a characteristic that helps to define our shared humanity. Our information
society has a way of reminding us of this reality, often in a dramatic fashion.
A recent example is the Asian earthquake and tsunami disaster when information
and communication technologies (ICT) brought the tragedy home to us in a manner
unimaginable in the not-so-distant past and produced a surge of unprecedented
global sympathy and humanitarian action.
From the birth of the telegraph, through radio and television broadcasting to
satellite communications and the Internet, the work of ITU has been essential in
harnessing the power of technology to fulfil a human basic need for
communication. May 17th 2005 marks 140 years since ITU took on this important
mission.
The year 2005 also marks another important anniversary for ITU. The release
of the Maitland Report 20 years ago helped the world realize that it was not
right that only a minority of the human race should enjoy the benefits of ICT
while a majority lived in comparative isolation. The ITU report, prepared by the
Maitland Commission, is a landmark in identifying the digital divide between
information "haves" and "have nots" and in proposing concrete solutions to
bridge it. Since its publication, ITU has been working in earnest to bring the
benefits of ICT to all of humanity.
In 2003, ITU held the first-ever World Summit on the Information Society in
Geneva. At the Summit, world leaders from 175 countries endorsed a Declaration
of Principles and a Plan of Action that embraced the idea of universal,
accessible and affordable access to ICTs. The Declaration of Principles has set
the stage. The Plan of Action points the way forward. Discussions at the Summit
also highlighted the fact that the digital divide is not only among countries,
but also within countries. Access to ICT also varies greatly between urban and
rural areas, between the rich and the poor, between the educated and the
illiterate and between men and women. This multiplicity of divides is a major
impediment to the emergence of an equitable and viable Information Society.
The second phase of the Summit, to be held this November in Tunis, will
measure progress made in fulfilling the specific objectives set in Geneva and
will call on all stakeholders to transform the political will expressed at the
first phase into long-term commitments. To help focus the world’s attention on
the importance of this mission, ITU members selected as the theme for World
Telecommunication Day 2005, Creating an Equitable Information Society:
Time for Action.
Looking ahead to Tunis, the true test of an equitable information society
will be the extent to which today's powerful knowledge-based communication tools
are able to connect different peoples across all geographic, economic and
information divides. As the members of the Maitland’s Commission stated 20 years
ago "Neither in the name of common humanity nor on grounds of common interests,
is such a disparity acceptable". Clearly, the time for action is now!
Yoshio UTSUMI
Secretary-General

The message of ITU Secretary-General is also available in pdf format in:
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