Global
diversity at Information Society conference
|
GENEVA,
21 December 2003 (BWNS) --
The global diversity of the worldwide Baha'i
community was showcased at a major United
Nations conference on the creation of a global
"Information Society".
The
Baha'i International Community assembled a
delegation of Internet and communications
specialists -- who are also Baha'i's -- for the
UN's World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS)
held from December 10-12 2003.
The
Baha'i delegation included one of the founders
of Africa Online, a top ranked entrepreneur, and
Internet consultant from Singapore, and a CISCO
Systems vice-president who is of Native American
origin. |

The Baha'i delegation (left to right): Michael
Quinn (United States), Bahiyyih Chaffers
(Canada), Laina Raveendran Greene (Singapore),
Karanja Gakio (Botswana).
|
It was
headed by Canadian Bahiyyih Chaffers, who was appointed
in August as a permanent representative of the Baha'i
International Community to the United Nations.
"Baha'is
believe that the emergence of a global information
society is an aspect of the inevitable coming together
of humanity in the construction of a new, just, and
peaceful global civilization," said Ms. Chaffers.
"It is
important that the growing information society be as
inclusive as possible, so that every human being has an
opportunity to participate in shaping global
society."
Some 54
heads of state, prime ministers, presidents, and vice
presidents, along with 83 ministers, came to the WSIS,
which drew official delegations from some 176 countries.
Also
attending were several thousand representatives of
non-governmental organizations, business groups, the
media, and other organizations of civil society.
The Summit,
called by the UN to assess the impact of information and
communications technology on human society, ended with
the adoption of a Declaration of Principles and Plan of
Action aimed at building a "people-centered,
inclusive, and development-oriented Information
Society."
"We
are going through a historic transformation in the way
we live, learn, work, communicate, and do
business," said UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan in
an opening speech to the Summit.
"We
must do so not passively, but as makers of our own
destiny. Technology has produced the information age.
Now it is up to all of us to build an information
society," Mr. Annan said.
For their
part, representatives of the Baha'i International
Community -- along with several Baha'i-inspired
organizations -- participated in the Summit at many
levels.
They
attended workshops, worked with other civil society
organizations on issues before the Summit, and presented
the results of various Baha'i-inspired projects in the
"ICT4D" (Information and Communication
Technology for Development) global village that was
associated with the WSIS.
Ms.
Chaffers, for example, was selected to chair the
"Ethics and Values Caucus," an ad hoc civil
society group that sought to ensure that moral and
ethical values were included in the Summit?s
deliberations. The Caucus issued a statement to the
Summit that said, in part:
"The
ethical dimension of the Information Society, where the
common good is its driving force, involves the
development of a code of practice at the individual,
community, national, and international levels, that
protects the dignity of every human life.
"This
ethical dimension is where the oneness of humanity is
recognized and respected and where each human being born
into the world is acknowledged as a trust of the
whole."
A member of
the Baha'i delegation, Karanja Gakio, participated on a
roundtable discussion of Internet security in developing
countries that was held at the ICT4D forum.
A number of
Baha'i agencies also participated in various summit
activities.
The
European Baha'i Business Forum (EBBF) sponsored a
workshop at the Summit titled "Toward a
Knowledge-based, Sustainable World Information Society:
The Role of Good Governance and Business."
It featured
a panel composed of Dr. Augusto Lopez-Claro, economist
and director of the World Competitiveness Report of the
World Economic Forum; Dr. Arthur Lyon-Dahl, president of
the International Environment Forum and a former senior
advisor to the United Nations Environment Programme; and
Dr. Ramin Khadem, chief financial officer of Immarsat,
London.