3.

4.

5.

The international community
and African governments should
mobilise resources for funding
research to keep abreast of the
rapidly changing media and
technology landscape in Africa.
African governments should
promote the development of
online media and African content,
including through the formulation
of non-restrictive policies on new
information and communications
technologies.
Training of media practitioners
in electronic communication,
research and publishing skills needs
to be supported and expanded,
in order to promote access to,
and dissemination of, global
information.

3.

4.

5.

6.

3$57)LYH
IMPLEMENTATION
1. UNESCO should distribute the
African Charter on Broadcasting
as broadly as possible, including to
stakeholders and the general public,
both in Africa and worldwide.
2. Media organizations and civil
society in Africa are encouraged
to use the Charter as a lobbying
tool and as their starting point in
the development of national and
regional broadcasting policies.
To this end media organisations
and civil society are encouraged
to initiate public awareness
campaigns, to form coalitions
on broadcasting reform, to
formulate broad casting policies,
to develop specific models for

regulatory bodies and public service
broadcasting, and to lobby relevant
official actors.
All debates about broad casting
should take into account the needs
of the commercial broadcasting
sector.
UNESCO should undertake an audit
of the Charter every five years,
given the pace of development in
the broadcasting field.
UNESCO should raise with member
governments the importance of
broadcast productions being given
special status and recognised as
cultural goods under the World
Trade Organization rules.
UNESCO should take measures
to promote the inclusion of the
theme of media, communications
and development in an appropriate
manner during the UN Summit on
the Information Society in 2003.




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