NEWSPAPER "LA VERDAD" (Murcia)

25 October 1995

"Sí, Spain"

By José A. Lozano Teruel, p. 57

The ciezan José Luis Pardos, presently Ambassador of Spain in Canada, is not a diplomat in the conventional use of the term. For many years, along his many important postings in several Embassies or at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Madrid, he has defended and is still defends a new international ethos based on solidarity and human rights.

In 1978, he summed up his ideal in what he called the rights of the three D's, that is, Decolonization, Disarmament and Development. Following the great transformations the world has experienced in the course of the last twenty years, he has now put the emphasis on the need for the three C's,, that is Conservation, Comprehension and Communication, an essential tripod for the future evolution of humanity. Within Conservation must be included all the existing concerns relating to ecosystems, environment and ecological concepts, while Comprehension refers to the several kinds of traditions, races, beliefs or popular customs. The last C corresponds to Communication and will be the subject of our scientific comment today , a clear proof that our Ambassador is conscious of the role of science and technology in our society. That is why he felt that his role could not be that of a mere spectator of their development, but that he could put them at the disposal of the Spanish interests by using the almost unlimited possibilities afforded us by the vast communication highway, INTERNET, which we referred to last week in this section, concentrating on one of its most popular tools, the WWW or World Wide Weeb.

An important thinker has contended that the classic concept of society, based mainly on the ideas of space and time is being transformed into a new concept of a digital society in which those references are diminished or cancelled. It appears evident that the isolation of people, which stems from the industrial society, makes even more necessary the need for communication, but if in the past, in order to communicate with someone far away space was necessary (transfer from one place to another) and time (derived from the former), the new computer technologies make it possible to emerge from that isolation without moving and immediately. The factors space and time have lost their role.

In May 1994, the Minister of Industry Juan Manuel Eguiagaray visited Ottawa and it was there that he learned and supported the idea of using the data base existing at the Embassy as a basis for preparing information, as useful as possible, in hypertext, which would make its world access possible through the Web of Internet. It would be, in any case, the first world experiment done in this field by any Embassy anywhere. On March 9th 1995, the Canadian coastguards seized a Spanish vessel, the ESTAI, in international waters, thus giving way to the so called turbot war or conflict. The tendentious informations issued by the Canadian authorities were difficult to counter, so a decisive step was made and within five days, the "Sí, Spain" page was already available on the world highway of Internet, at the following address: http://www.DocuWeb.ca/SiSpain/.

One of the sections included is that of Fisheries where those who visit the electronic page can simply click the mouse of the computer and access a vast array of information and documents relating to the situation of fisheries and Spanish fishermen in Newfoundland.

From the Fisheries section, one can follow all the events incurred into in the turbot dispute or the hypoglossal dispute and learn its scientific name, "Reinhardtius hippoglossoides". A section on the historical background refers to the Basque and Celt fishermen who, in the XII and XIII centuries, were already working in those areas, as well as the foundation of the first city in North America, Saint John's Newfoundland, by fishermen originating from Saint Jean de Luz in France and San Juan de Pasajes in Spain. In other sections, one can find a detailed account of all the events during the conflict, related chronicles and news, exchange of official information, the position of the Embassy with proofs of the manipulation of Canadian public opinion, the denoucement of the difference in behaviour followed by Canada to resolve its fisheries conflicts with the USA, etc. Undoubtedly, the attractiveness and seriousness of the informations offered were responsible for the immediate success of "Sí Spain", so that at the beginning of last summer, only after a few months of operation, over 100.000 users from more than 65 countries had already accessed its pages. And last Wednesday, October 18th, it had already reached the record number of 257.833 accesses. Furthermore, a few months ago, this initiative was designated , in Canada!, as one of the best Web cultural sites, along with institutions such as CBC TV or the National Ballet of Canada. This interest favours another initiative of the Ambassador, the creation of a "Club of friends" of Galician and Newfoundland fishermen, which will serve as a meeting point and mutual understanding, similar to another Club of Spanish and French fishermen that is supported by Greenpeace.

However, "Sí, Spain" does not only deal with fisheries. From there, the reader who is interested in Spain may access very different informations, immediatedly available from the hypertext which lead to sections on Geography, History, Language, Culture, Politics, Economy, Education, Science, Industry, Commerce, etc. Worth mentioning is the access to a very useful Guide for the Spanish citizen in Canada as well as the inclusion of a Spanish interactive course for beginners, while other connections lead to electronic sites such as the Spanish Presidency of the European Union, Spanish electronic newspapers such as ABC, el Periódico de Cataluña, La Vanguardia, etc. which, due to the time lag can be read in Canada several hours before the dawn of the day they are issued, the MaeNet or information page of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs or the ambitious IberWeb program in Spanish, English and Portuguese developed jointly by the twenty Iberoamerican Embassies to facilitate as much knowledge as possible on their respective countries. Moreover, from "Sí, Spain" one can easily and almost directly access close to one hundred interesting connections on Spain which range from authentic flamenco groups to Universities, a Swedish file on Dalí paintings, virtual tourist guides in Spain, etc.

Today's example confirms Pardos' idea that the spreading of information is the first pillar of diplomacy, essential for negotiation and, in any case, representation, thus establishing a tripod which still constitudes traditional diplomatic carreer and activity. Thus we must congratulate ourselves for the example of "Sí Spain" that represents a perfect harmony between those traditional objectives of Diplomacy and the present means of science.

End of article.

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