At the ITU’s WTDC-25 in Baku, Union MoS Dr. Pemmasani Chandra Sekhar called cybersecurity a shared global responsibility, urging nations to align on resilient cross-border frameworks, best-practice sharing, and data protection. Showcasing India’s digital scale and fraud crackdown, he framed the agenda with “Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam”—the world is one family.
India’s pitch at WTDC-25
Presenting India’s vision for a secure, inclusive digital future, Dr. Pemmasani emphasized collaboration to build interoperable cybersecurity frameworks and protect data across borders, reaffirming India’s long-standing partnership with the ITU since 1869 and grounding the message in “digital solidarity”. He highlighted India’s unprecedented connectivity scale—over 1.2 billion telecom subscribers, 1 billion internet users, and 1.4 billion digital identities—as proof that accessibility, affordability, and scale can advance togetherThe Hindu+1.
India also showcased recent enforcement actions against online fraud, including disconnection of over 30 million fraudulent connections and prevention of 6.6 million suspect transactions, positioning operational vigilance alongside policy collaboration.
Key highlights
Shared responsibility:
Call for resilient, interoperable cybersecurity frameworks, cross-border best-practice sharing, and robust data protection norms.
Digital solidarity ethos:
India anchored its appeal in “Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam,” linking ethical responsibility with practical cooperation in the global digital commons.
Scale and inclusion:
India’s connectivity footprint—1.2B subscribers, 1B internet users, 1.4B digital identities—underscores both opportunity and security imperatives.
Action against fraud:
Disconnected 30M fraudulent connections; blocked 6.6M suspected transactions, demonstrating coordinated enforcement capacity.
ITU partnership roots:
India’s association with ITU dates to 1869, reinforcing institutional continuity behind new collaboration proposals.
Outcome focus:
Push for harmonized incident reporting, capacity-building, and inclusive access to secure digital services for developing economies.
Why it matters
Cyber threats ignore borders. India’s WTDC-25 stance merges ethical framing with measurable action, arguing for interoperable standards and collective defense so that growth in connectivity doesn’t outpace safeguards. For emerging economies, shared frameworks can lower duplication costs, accelerate capability, and raise baselines for citizen protection without stalling innovation.
What to watch next
Framework alignment: Progress on shared incident taxonomy, threat intel exchange, and cross-certification of controls.
Capacity-building: Joint training, CERT-to-CERT drills, and scalable tooling for low-resource environments.
Data protection bridges: Pathways that reconcile sovereignty with secure, lawful cross-border data flows.
Sources: Daily Excelsior, The Hindu, The New Indian Express