SEGOVIA, SPAIN, 15 March 2010: Government delegations from Latin America, the Caribbean and the European Union agreed Monday in Segovia, Spain, to strengthen digital strategies to further develop the regulation of the information and communications technologies (ICTs) sector, access and use of the Internet, privacy and reliability of the network, digital contents, e-government and Internet governance.
The two-day forum was organized by the Spanish Presidency of the European Union in collaboration with the European Commission, with the support of the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC).
In their final statement, participants acknowledged the different degrees of development and challenges of the Information Society in the two regions and called for continuing the progress achieved since the World Summits on the Information Society (WSIS) began.
In Latin America in particular, delegates highlighted the contribution of the lis Programme (the European Union’s Alliance for the Information Society) carried out by ECLAC, which seeks to extend the benefits of the Information Society to every citizen in the region and reduce the digital gap.
At the end of the meeting, the Secretary of State for Telecommunications and for the Information Society in Spain, Francisco Ros, stressed that regulatory model for the ICT sector need to be agile in order to adapt to the dynamics of the Information Society without posing barriers.
The Director of ECLAC’s Production, Productivity and Management Division, Mario Cimoli, agreed on the importance of regulation and the role of public administration in Latin America to reduce the enormous domestic gaps in countries in the region with specific policies tailored to each country. – We can’t lose the train of the ICTs, and to get on it, access has to be strengthened greatly, he said.
The Forum was attended by representatives from Argentina, Austria, Brazil, Colombia, the European Commission, Costa Rica, Cuba, Germany, the Czech Republic, Denmark, Ecuador, El Salvador, Spain, Hungary, Italy, Malta, Mexico, Portugal, the Netherlands, Slovakia, Slovenia, Sweden, the United Kingdom and Uruguay.