Experts at a world conference on desertification in Tunisia on Monday called for political leaders to use the technical tools available to stem the merciless advance of parched land and its devastating social, economic and human consequences. "In most cases, the technical solutions exist and the know-how is available to help the greatest number," a United Nations official said.
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/ 18 November 2005
A debate about freedom of expression simmered at a United Nations communications summit on Thursday as a French campaigner was stopped from attending and China and Senegal defended limits on free speech. Senegalese President Abdoulaye Wade told journalists that he regretted having given too much freedom to the press.
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/ 18 November 2005
A Namibian NGO producing comic strips to promote use of information and communications technology has won an award in the community-engagement category at the just-ended World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) in Tunis, Tunisia. The NGO, Schoolnet Namibia, exhibited at the WSIS its comic-strip project.
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/ 17 November 2005
Tunisian authorities on Thursday refused to allow the head of press freedom group Reporters Without Borders into the country to attend the United Nations communications and internet summit. The Paris-based group said that its secretary general Robert Menard was refused entry at Tunis airport.
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/ 16 November 2005
The President of Zimbabwe, Robert Mugabe, on Wednesday attacked the United States at the opening of the World Summit on Information Society (WSIS) in Tunis, Tunisia, for monopolising the governance of the internet. Mugabe said the summit is supposed to engender confidence in internet users outside Europe and North America.
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/ 16 November 2005
At least 800 000 villages — or 30% of the world’s villages — are unconnected to any kind of information and communications technology (ICT), and this requires an investment of about -billion to rectify, said the International Telecommunications Union’s secretary general at the World Summit on Information Society in Tunisia on Tuesday.
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/ 15 November 2005
Under the incredulous eyes of the participants at the World Summit on the Information Society in Tunis, Tunisia, journalists and human rights defenders were manhandled, insulted, and then beaten, said the Association for Progressive Communications on Tuesday.
The plight of Tunisian attorney Mohamed Abbou has been in the spotlight for several weeks now. The attorney received a three-and-a-half-year sentence last month for having made statements deemed likely to disturb public order, after he criticised Tunisian President Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali’s invitation to Israel’s Prime Minister, Ariel Sharon, to attend the World Summit on the Information Society.
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/ 25 October 2004
Tunisian President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali has won re-election for a fourth term by an overwhelming margin in a vote denounced as ”surreal” and an insult to democracy by several opposition leaders. According to final figures announced by the Interior Ministry on Monday, Ben Ali garnered 94,48% of the weekend vote.
TUNISIA has insisted that an accident was the most likely cause of an explosion outside a synagogue that killed 10 German tourists and five other people, while German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder said he was ”no longer sure” it was a terror attack.