ITU Launches development initiative to bridge the Digital Divide

 

The International Telecommunication Union has launched a major new
development drive designed to bring access to information and communication
technologies (ICTs) to the estimated one billion people worldwide for whom
making a simple telephone call remains out of reach.

 

Called Connect the World, the initiative is a global multi-stakeholder
effort established within the context of the World Summit on the Information
Society (WSIS) to encourage new projects and partnerships to bridge the
digital divide. By showcasing development efforts now underway and by
identifying areas where needs are the most pressing, Connect the World will
create a critical mass that will generate the momentum needed to connect all
communities by 2015. At present, ITU estimates that around 800’000 villages
— or 30% of all villages worldwide — are still without any kind of
connection.

 

Connect the World places strong emphasis on the importance of partnerships
between the public and private sectors, UN agencies and civil society. It
has 22 founding partners, including leading corporate players such as
Alcatel, Huawei, Intel, Microsoft, KDDI, Telefónica, Infosys and WorldSpace,
whose CEOs have all embraced the goals of the initiative.

 

Partners also include governments and government agencies including Egypt,
France, Senegal and the Korea Agency for Digital Opportunity and Promotion
(KADO), regional and international organizations including UNESCO, the
Universal Postal Union (UPU), the European Commission, the International
Telecommunication Satellite Organization, RASCOM and the United Nations Fund
for International Partnerships (UNFIP), as well as a range of organizations
from civil society including Télécoms Sans Frontières, the M S Swaminathan
Research Foundation and Child Helpline International.

 

The initiative comprises three key Building Blocks — Enabling Environment,
Infrastructure & Readiness, and Applications & Services — which together
constitute the primary areas that need to be addressed when developing
concrete measures to accelerate ICT development. All Connect the World
founding partners have current development projects in one or more of these
areas. They will be encouraged to develop new partnerships and initiatives,
while additional partners will be actively sought in areas not adequately
covered to ensure underserved communities get what they need where it’s
needed most.

 

Speaking at the launch of the initiative at UN headquarters in Geneva, ITU
Secretary-General Mr Yoshio Utsumi spoke of the urgent need to connect those
still deprived of ready access to ICTs.

 

"It is time to stop regarding access to ICTs as a privilege available to the
rich few within a country, and the rich few countries in the world," said
Utsumi. "ICTs now underpin just about every aspect of modern life. They are
basic infrastructure, as necessary to economic and social development as
postal services, banks, medical centres and schools." 

 

At present, the 942 million people living in the world’s developed economies
enjoy five times better access to fixed and mobile phone services, nine
times better access to Internet services, and own 13 times more PCs than the
85% of the world’s population living in low and lower-middle income
countries. But while figures do show a clear improvement over the last ten
years in bridging the gap between information "haves" and "have-nots", they
nonetheless fail to paint a true picture for many rural dwellers, whose
communities are still often unserved by any form of ICT.

 

"It is not ICTs that will solve the problem of the digital divide, it is
people and especially people working in partnership. So while Connect the
World is about harnessing the power of ICTs, it’s also about harnessing the
power of people working together to connect the unconnected," said ITU’s
Utsumi.

 

By providing an international platform to showcase the many innovative and
successful development initiatives already underway, ITU hopes Connect the
World will spur organizations at every level to get actively involved in
development. "Every Connect the World partner is currently working to make a
real difference. I applaud their efforts, and hope the projects they are
showcasing within this initiative will serve to stimulate new partnerships
and inspire others to join us and to launch their own development
activities," said Utsumi.

 

 

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