| FOREIGN MINISTERS VOW TO STRIVE SO 
       EVERYONE IN THE AMERICAS CAN BENEFIT FROM THE KNOWLEDGE-BASED SOCIETY  
        
       
       
        
       Declaration of Santo Domingo Adopted  SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic,
       June 6, 2006 —The region’s Ministers of Foreign Affairs, who have 
       been meeting here for the thirty-sixth regular session of the General 
       Assembly of the Organization of American States (OAS), today adopted the 
       Declaration of Santo Domingo on the central theme of the meeting: “Good 
       Governance and Development in the Knowledge-based Society.” In the 
       document, adopted by acclamation, the foreign ministers affirmed that 
       “the development and equitable and universal access to the 
       knowledge-based society constitutes a challenge and an opportunity that 
       helps us to address the common social, economic, and political goals of 
       the countries of the Americas.”  OAS Secretary General José Miguel Insulza said at the 
       end of the three days of deliberations that this General Assembly had 
       been “positive both for the region and for the Organization.” He stressed 
       the cooperative spirit that characterized the discussions at the regional 
       meeting, even in the case of bilateral differences that had been going on 
       for several months.  In closing the OAS forum, the Chair of the General 
       Assembly and Foreign Minister of the host country, Carlos Morales 
       Troncoso, said the member countries had shown a firm commitment to OAS 
       ideals and principles, “and the result has been a new impetus to our 
       agenda through declarations and resolutions.” He noted that the 
       Declaration of Santo Domingo lays out “an appropriate framework for 
       reaching our common aspiration of building a knowledge-based society.”
        In the final declaration, the delegations of 34 OAS 
       member states called on the Secretary General – taking into account the 
       OAS Charter and the Inter-American Democratic Charter – to promote the 
       use of information and communication technologies (ICTs) to facilitate 
       the participate of citizens in public life, thereby strengthening 
       democratic governance.  The foreign ministers called on the OAS General 
       Secretariat to integrate ICTs as a “cross-cutting tool” in designing 
       inter-American policies and programs related to governance and equitable, 
       sustainable development. They agreed to “promote the utilization of ICTs 
       for the follow-up, oversight and evaluation of public administration by 
       the citizenry, in order to achieve a transparent and efficient 
       government, and the strengthening of democracy.”  The region’s foreign ministers, who make up the 
       highest decision-making body of the OAS, expressed their commitment, in 
       the spirit of the Inter-American Democratic Charter, “to guarantee the 
       liberty of every person to enjoy freedom of expression, including access 
       to uncensored political debate and the free exchange of ideas through all 
       forms of mass media, including the Internet.”  In the same declaration, adopted late tonight, the 
       region’s leading diplomats reiterated the commitment made in June 2005 in 
       the Declaration of Florida to deliver the benefits of democracy and 
       advance prosperity, democratic values and security in the hemisphere, 
       adding that information technologies “can play a valuable role in this 
       regard.”  They called for the participation of the private 
       sector, civil society, regional and international institutions, including 
       financial institutions, to develop complementary strategies that promote 
       “universal access to the Internet for all the peoples of the Americas.” 
       They also expressed a “heightened commitment” to foster literacy, as well 
       as investment in science, technology, mathematics and engineering.  The ministers invited the OAS Permanent Council to 
       convene a specialized inter-American conference to exchange experiences 
       and best practices that might help the member states design or enhance 
       legislative, regulatory and administrative frameworks with respect to 
       ICTs, enabling them to better support advances in the expanding 
       knowledge-based society and to promote investment.  During its last plenary session, the General Assembly 
       also approved by acclamation the designation of Panama as the host 
       country of the 2007 General Assembly.. |