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RE: [hr-wsis] Modified letter to De Mello
- To: <hr-wsis@iris.sgdg.org>
- Subject: RE: [hr-wsis] Modified letter to De Mello
- From: "Christine Ferrier" <cf@omct.org>
- Date: Mon, 2 Jun 2003 11:40:24 +0200
- Thread-index: AcMoTcFeKbJTkT9nQGyzdRTRYFIJowAm81Pw
- Thread-topic: [hr-wsis] Modified letter to De Mello
World Organisation Against Torture (OMCT) is willing to sign, but we still have a little problem with the following sentence:
Civil society organizations view ICTs as having both tremendous
applications that enhance human rights, such as through the rapid
dissemination of action alerts and instant access to human rights
information, and disturbing capacities to greatly diminish human
rights, such as through enhanced surveillance and monitoring functions
of governments facilitated by ICTs.
We think it would be much clearer to write:
...and disturbing capacities to greatly diminish human
rights,by providing governments with means that enable intrusive surveillance and monitoring and therefore, repression.
Thank you for the work!
Christine Ferrier
cf@omct.org
Organisation Mondiale contre la Torture (OMCT)
World Organisation against Torture
Tel: +4122 809 49 39
Fax: +4122 809 49 29
http://www.omct.org
Sergio Vieira de Mello
High Commissioner for Human Rights
United Nations
Geneva, Switzerland
RE: Human Rights and the World Summit on the Information Society
Your Excellency Mr. Sergio Vieira de Mello:
The under-signed civil society organizations strongly encourage the
active participation of your Office at the highest representation level
in the preparatory committee and summit meeting of the World Summit on
the Information Society, taking place in September and December 2003,
respectively. Human rights are an essential requirement of the
Information Society, as elaborated in the draft declaration of the WSIS
(WSIS/PCIP/DT/1-E):
10. The essential requirements for the development of an equitable
Information Society include: The respect for all internationally
recognized human rights and fundamental freedoms. Notably the right to
freedom of opinion and expression, including the right to hold opinions
without interference and seek to, receive and impart information and
ideas through any media and regardless of frontiers in accordance with
article 19 of the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights and to
unhindered access by individuals to communication media and information
sources…
As the United Nations highest human rights official, your good offices
are needed to ensure that human rights language in the WSIS process is
comprehensive, strong and consistent with resolutions and decisions
adopted by the Commission on Human Rights and build upon human rights
language developed through the various UN world summits and conferences.
Civil society organizations view ICTs as having both tremendous
applications that enhance human rights, such as through the rapid
dissemination of action alerts and instant access to human rights
information, and disturbing capacities to greatly diminish human
rights, such as through enhanced surveillance and monitoring functions
of governments facilitated by ICTs.
Only through the active participation of governments, civil society,
and international human rights institutions such as your Office can
these ICTs be best harnessed to maximize the protection of human rights
worldwide.
We thank you for your consideration of this request and look forward to
seeing you in September.
Sincerely,
[under-signed NGOs]
--
Meryem Marzouki - http://www.iris.sgdg.org
IRIS - Imaginons un réseau Internet solidaire
294 rue de Charenton - 75012 Paris
Tel/Fax. +33(0)144749239
--
Putting the "Human Rights in the Information Society" issue on the WSIS Agenda
Working list of NGOs
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