Ardern and Macron to co-chair summit
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern and French President Emmanuel Macron will co-chair a Christchurch Call leaders’ summit this week.
The Christchurch Call was initiated by Ardern in the wake of the Christchurch mosque shootings in March 2019 and aims to eliminate terrorist and violent extremist content online. The second anniversary virtual summit will be held on Saturday, and will involve governments, tech companies and civil society.
In a joint statement, Ardern and Macron said leaders would agree on a work plan and priorities for the year ahead.
‘‘We expect the call community to refine its focus, redouble its efforts, and agree to a priority work plan for the year ahead,’’ Ardern said. ‘‘Among the priorities I would like to see progressed is a strengthened collective ability to manage crises related to terrorist and violent extremist content online.
‘‘I would like to see us grow our shared understanding of algorithmic processes that have the potential to cause harm, or to radicalise or incite to acts of terrorism and violent extremism. And to develop positive interventions to address these.’’
Increased transparency on methods used to moderate harmful online content, from companies and governments, would underpin the call’s commitment to upholding internet freedoms, Macron said. ‘‘A strengthened call community is critical to our enduring success. It needs to support and empower its members to engage in direct, constructive dialogue on issues of substance, support each other to do better and, where necessary, hold each other to account on delivery of the call.’’
On Saturday, it was announced that the United States will join the call and attend the summit. Ardern and Macron said US support would send a ‘‘powerful message to those who would seek to exploit the internet to promote terrorism and violent extremism’’. – RNZ