Dear Colleagues,
 
The RIPE NCC is a Sector Member of ITU-D and participates at the World 
Telecommunication Development Conference (WTDC), where we engage with 
participants and member states to advance the priorities that address the 
Internet-related issues in line with NCC's vision and mission. 

The 9th ITU World Telecommunication Development Conference (WTDC-2022) 
<https://www.itu.int/en/ITU-D/Conferences/WTDC/WTDC21/Pages/default.aspx> was 
held from 6 to 16 June in Kigali, under the theme "Connecting the Unconnected 
to Achieve Sustainable Development, to set the development agenda and 
priorities for ITU Telecommunication Development Sector (ITU-D) for the 2022 to 
2025 period. More than 2000 delegates from 150 Member States plus over 350 
sector members participated in the conference; 45 resolutions have been 
updated, and four new resolutions have been approved.

The WTDC opening plenary projected the Russian-Ukraine war discourse, where the 
Ukraine delegation, supported by other member states, objected to the 
nomination of Russian candidates to any position on the WTDC Committees due to 
Russia’s actions in Ukraine. A secret ballot to resolve the issue resulted in 
not accepting the Russian appointments. This practice has become normality 
where similar objections took place during WTSA & at ITU Council meetings 
earlier this year. 

A significant risk to RIRs at the WTDC came from resolution 63: “IP addresses 
allocation and facilitating the transition to IPv6 deployment in developing 
countries”. The Chinese wanted to amend resolution 63 to include an explicit 
reference to IPV6+ as a technology and commercial innovation trend. Many member 
states and sector members, including the RIPE NCC and other RIRs, ICANN and 
ISOC, all opposed this proposal with the fact that IPv6+ is not a standard 
developed by the IETF, where technical standards should be developed, and that 
it is not even clearly defined and could impact the IPv6 deployment progress. 
In the end, the Chinese proposal was not accepted.

It’s worth noting that member states continue to disagree sharply on 
cybersecurity. Resolution 45 on Cybersecurity had two ad hoc groups and a lot 
of informal discussions. Several proposals referencing UN processes, the need 
for the ITU to serve as a platform, and cybercrime references were removed, and 
only four proposed consensus texts were retained.

As a sector member of ITU-D, we will remain engaged with ITU-D meetings and 
study groups and update NCC management and the RIPE community on any 
developments. Some excellent team efforts from colleagues from ARIN, AFRINIC, 
and ISOC are to be highlighted. Thanks for all; our involvement and joint 
efforts have paid off, which is a great result.
  
Best Regards,
Chafic
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