The importance of WTDC-02
for the World Summit on the Information Society
The
global information society continues to evolve at break-neck speed with information and
communication technologies (ICT) at the heart of this fundamental transformation. However, the
uneven access to ICTs, commonly referred to as the "digital divide", continues to be a
challenge. Governments and regulators have a duty to make sure that telecommunication access is
available to everyone. We also have a responsibility to ensure that telecommunication is priced
reasonably, making not just the technology, but also the services available and affordable to
all sectors of society.
In order to meet these challenges, the International Telecommunication Union is playing an
increasingly vital role as a facilitator of international policy-making. This is especially
important to the work of the upcoming World Telecommunication Development Conference (WTDC-02)
as it addresses the problems of access to ICTs. These include imbalances between developed and
developing nations, between urban and rural areas, and between the younger and older
generations.
While many middle-income developing countries are making rapid progress to achieve
world-class networks, it is in the world's poorest nations where the problems of the digital
divide are most acute. The challenge facing WTDC-02 is to show how sector reform and investment
in information and communication technologies can make a genuine difference to improving the
lives of the world's most deprived. I believe that together we can meet this important
challenge.
The most prosperous nations of the world, the G8, have made a joint commitment to address the
global inequities of the information society. As part of that commitment, WTDC-02 is holding a
special session to discuss both short- and long-term action plans to bridge the digital divide.
This will provide critical input for the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) to be
held under ITU's leadership in 2003 and 2005, at which time a common vision and understanding of
the information society will be developed by all of its stakeholders. As a result, ITU finds
itself in an historic and privileged position. The work accomplished by WTDC-02, together with
that of the United Nations ICT Task Force, the G8, the Global Digital Opportunity Initiative and
other international stakeholders will allow us, for the first time, to obtain a commitment to
this vision from those at the highest political level on both sides of the digital divide.
Yoshio Utsumi
Secretary-General
International Telecommunication Union
|