President tells Global Symposium:
ICT should harmonize with values
* Dangerous influences must be
prevented
* Communication technology should
be handled with care
The wonders of ICT should not alienate our children from what is best
in their culture and traditional values, President Mahinda Rajapaksa
said yesterday.
He said it should also not be a tool to sow hatred and which pays no
heed to the values of decency, tolerance and humanity. The President was
addressing the International Telecommunication Union’s (ITU) 12th Annual
Global Symposium of Regulators in Colombo.
“It is timely that this Symposium with focus on ICT takes place the
day after the International Day of the Child. Because it is technology
that has great attraction and meaning to children. ‘It can take their
thinking and skills to new heights of achievement. It can promise them a
great new world of ideas and innovation.
"But, it can also lead them to dangerous influences which draw them
away from tolerance and towards extremism of many kinds. It is a
technology that needs to be handled with great care imposing much more
duties and responsibilities on parents in the guidance of their
children.
"The wonders of ICT should not alienate our children from what is
best in their culture and traditional values," the President emphasized.
The President also referring to the audience to the events of recent
weeks said he believed that they would think of ways and means of
preventing this great technology being used to sow hatred.
"Examine how to avoid the advances of instant communication being the
source and cause of violence against faiths, against cultures, and
traditions that need respect and protection."
He said ICT must not be the tool of societies that pay homage to
material values and pay no heed to the values of decency, tolerance and
humanity. He said the ICT sector stands out in the progress made by Sri
Lanka in the past seven years and accelerated in the three years since
the defeat of terrorism. Our emphasis on communication as a key path to
peace and reconciliation can be seen by the speed with which we restored
the communications tower in Kokavil in the North destroyed by the
terrorists. This opened speedy communications to the area most damaged
by them. Two weeks ago, we also linked the entire North, earlier ravaged
by terrorism, to the national power grid, which will add to the progress
of telecommunications and ICT in this region.
He said Sri Lanka recognizes the need for rapid progress in the ICT
field, a technology that is racing ahead with innovations and new
applications that make our world smaller each day. It opens pathways to
progress to the people, breaking down the barriers of race, ethnicity,
community, faith and geography.
The President said Sri Lanka's IT literacy has grown to over 40 per
cent within the past six years, with the opportunity very soon for every
school to have state-of-the-art computer training facilities. These
advances have positively impacted on the rural sector and helped the
overall growth of the economy. This also makes Sri Lanka a promising
destination for investors in diverse sectors, from business outsourcing
to industry, tourism and agriculture.
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