Internet
Is A Fundamental Right
More than
three people across the
world believe access to
the Internet is a fundamental
right, a poll carried out
for the BBC indicated Monday.
The poll,
which questioned more than
27,000 adults across 26
countries, suggested strong
support globally for access
to the web.
The findings
come as efforts are stepped
up across the world to increase
net access, with the United
Nations leading a push for
more people to be given
the opportunity to get online.
Countries
including Finland and Estonia
have already ruled it is
a human right, said the
BBC. “The right to
communicate cannot be ignored,”
Hamadoun Toure, secretary-general
of the International Telecommunication
Union, told the broadcaster.
“The
Internet is the most powerful
potential source of enlightenment
ever created.”
Almost 79
percent of those questioned
said they strongly agreed
or somewhat agreed with
the description of the Internet
as a “fundamental
right of all people.”
This included people who
had access and those who
did not.
A total of
87 percent of Internet users
questioned in the poll,
carried out by GlobeScan
for the BBC, felt access
should be a right, while
more than 70 percent of
non-users agreed with this
view.
Mexico, Brazil
and Turkey were among countries
where support was highest,
according to the survey.
The findings also suggested
people in a diverse range
of countries felt the web
was a vital part of their
lives. Three-quarters in
Japan, Mexico and Russia
said they could not cope
without it. South Korea,
where nearly all citizens
enjoy high-speed net access,
had the greatest majority
of people — 96 percent
— who believed access
was a fundamental right.
The US Treasury
Department on Monday eased
sanctions on Iran, Cuba
and Sudan to allow exports
by US companies of services
related to Web browsing,
blogging, email, instant
messaging, chat, social
networking and photo- and
movie-sharing.
“We’re
supporting the right of
free expression,”
US Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton said Monday The
decision to allow exports
of Web tools to Iran was
intended to allow Iranians
to “communicate without
being blocked by their own
government”, she explained.