 Excellencies, Secretary-General Toure, distinguished delegates, ladies and gentlemen, I am pleased to address the ITU World Conference on International Telecommunications. I thank the United Arab Emirates for hosting. Information and communications technologies are transforming our world, opening doors, educating and empowering people, saving lives. The Arab Spring showed the power of ICT to help people voice their legitimate demands for human rights and greater accountability. As we strive to achieve the Millennium Development Goals and shape the post-2015 development agenda, expanding the benefits of ICTs will be crucial. In the coming days, we will review the agreement that underpins how we communicate with each other across the globe. Our overall objective must be to ensure universal access to information and communication technology, including for the two-thirds of the world's population currently not online. A digital divide has no place in the information age and 21st-century knowledge economy. The management of information and communication technology should be transparent, democratic and inclusive. I am gratified that you have taken steps to open the process, including the vital voices of civil society and the private sector. The United Nations system stands behind the goal of an open Internet. The right to communicate is essential to the ITU's mission. The universal declaration of human rights guarantees freedom of expression across all media and all frontiers. As a world summit on the information society affirmed, the free flow of information and ideas is essential for peace, development, human rights and our common progress. These freedoms are indispensable. We must continue to work together and find consensus on how to effectively keep cyberspace open, accessible, affordable and secure for all. I trust that together, governments, industry and civil society will rise to this occasion. I wish you a successful conference.