Walk
first, then surf
December 2005
The Internet has acted as a great equaliser,
allowing millions of ordinary and marginalised people to access alternative
sources of information and make their voices heard. In fact, cyberspace has
helped people living under dictatorial and semi-authoritarian regimes find a
way around government controls and reach each other and the outside world,
while citizens in freer countries have used it to overcome the bias built-in to
mainstream media systems.
Nevertheless, the World Wide Web closely
reflects the real world in its stark divisions. It is a telling fact that less
than one in 10 people in the world has any access to the Internet, with the
vast majority of those who do living in the US, Europe, Japan and other
industrialised countries. In some ways, this figure is easy to explain:
according to UNESCO statistics, one in every five people in the world is
illiterate.
One of the aims of the recent World Summit on
the Information Society (WSIS), held in Tunis in November, was to extract a
commitment from world leaders, industry and civil society to bridge this digital
divide. It was the UN’s largest ever summit, drawing 18,000 people from 176
countries, including 44 heads of state, mostly from Africa. Participants
pledged “to build a people-centred, inclusive and development-oriented
information society” so that “people everywhere can create access, utilise and
share information and knowledge”.
In many parts of the world, information has
become a vital tool and many post-industrial countries are navigating a route
to the so-called knowledge-based society. However, coverage of the summit
overlooked several important issues. Developing countries may well be on the
margins of the Internet but surfing the web is a luxury untold millions
struggling to subsist can ill afford and from which they can hardly benefit. People
in such situations need to bridge the diet and disease divide before they can
think about crossing the digital one. Development and humanitarian assistance
is already scarce as rich countries continuously fail to meet the modest target
of devoting 0.7 per cent of national income to aid.
What use is a computer in, say, a sub-Saharan
African village where people have no electricity or communications
infrastructure, not enough food, and where a large proportion of the productive
population is dying of AIDS and other diseases? Even if the $100 wind-up laptop
designed by an MIT whiz does sell the predicted 100 million units by the end of
2006, there is still the question of software. Clockwork computers are all very
well but what about the more than 860 million people who are illiterate and the
millions more who are functionally so, i.e. they do not possess enough literacy
to make their way in the world? Then there are the hundreds of millions who do
not understand English, the dominant language in cyberspace which, according to
various sources, represents more than half the web’s content.
Further reading
Senegalese President
Abdoulaye Wade underlined this bizarre situation when he remarked in Tunis: “In
Manhattan there are more telephones than in the whole of Africa. Africa is
still disconnected from the world and it's not because a few people have
computers that anything will change.”
Although efforts to level the electronic
playing field might help narrow the gap between rich and poor countries in
aggregate terms, it will probably succeed in broadening the already wide
internal wealth and educational divisions within developing countries by
providing the privileged with even more knowledge and the relatively few jobs
such investments provide.
Even showcase developing countries, such as
India, are seeing a mixed bag of returns from the IT explosion which has
created a wealthy and upwardly mobile knowledge class but done little for the
population as a whole. “It’s a shame that we in India have so many IT
professionals whose skills get used so much for the export-dollar but hardly at
all (except in a spill-over manner) in tackling the issues that a billion
people seeking a better life deal with daily,” admitted Nitin Desai, a special
adviser to the UN secretary-general, in an interview in India’s Financial
Express.
In addition, wealthy countries have indicated
that no new money will be available to promote WSIS goals and principles. “A
growing proportion [of EU aid] goes to developing country governments directly
to support their own development plans and budgets and they choose how much to
allocate to ICT,” Alun Michael, the UK’s minister of state for industry and
regions, told the summit on behalf of the EU.
Given this limited largesse and suspicion over
the motives of the private sector for getting involved in the WSIS movement,
the international community needs to help the world’s least privileged citizens
crawl before they can surf. Massive investment is needed by developing
countries if they are to tackle unexceptional issues, such as promoting basic
education among the 100 million children lacking access to schools, to clean
drinking water, proper sanitation, and functioning healthcare, and combat
communicable diseases and resolve festering conflicts. Only then will efforts
to help developing countries click their way out of poverty pay off.
This article appeared in the 8-14 December 2005
edition of Al Ahram Weekly
ã2005 K. Diab. Unless otherwise stated, all the content on this website
is the copyright of Khaled Diab.