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NEWS: IT messenger ushers in new era in Rajasthan villages
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IT messenger ushers in new era in Rajasthan villages By Lola Nayar, Indo-Asian News Service New Delhi, Apr 4 (IANS) A new messenger has arrived in the villages around the popular tourist hub of Jaipur in Rajasthan and is changing lives forever. This IT-enabled messenger called 'Gramdoot' is slowly altering lifestyles in as many as 413 out of 488 villages of Jaipur district. Now farmers in far-flung villages are able to keep abreast of market trends on a day-to-day basis. And the IT link is slowly taking the place of village elders in arranging marriage alliances. Besides facilitating shopping and selling online, the IT link is also bringing satellite TV channels into homes, enabling easy contact with relatives and friends and, most importantly, getting easy access to government departments for complaints and getting work done without paying any bribe, say villagers. Heralding this change is Aksh Broadband Ltd., a group company of optic fibre manufacturing major Aksh Optifibre Ltd., which has been linking Jaipur villages with aerial cable to provide digital connectivity through Gramdoot kiosks. Rural IT connectivity for providing e-governance may not be a new thing in India, but the Aksh Broadband venture is very different from the other models, said Sudhansh Pant, the district magistrate of Jaipur. "It is a very useful project which provides tools for e-governance with no cost to the government. Instead people, even in remote villages, are getting connected to the administration and cutting down on the tedium of getting their problems addressed," Pant told IANS during a visit here. While some other companies like n-Logue Communications have arrived on the scene in Jaipur to provide competition, Pant feels Aksh kiosks are different in that they look beyond e-governance and marketing tools to provide a multidimensional communication network at affordable rates. "Given the benefit to the people and administration through this means, we are acting as a facilitator. To keep our commitment, we begin the week with a review of the work done and issues that need to be addressed at the district level," said Pant. In just a few months of starting commercial operations, hundreds of Aksh kiosks spread across Jaipur district have started making a difference, generating increasing usage by villagers, many of whom till recently were unaware of IT communications, said Rajneesh Bhandari, president of Aksh Broadband Ltd. "Through our hub head at Jaipur we are helping the kiosks to provide a range of services right from telephone facilities to Internet facilities, computer education, e-governance and satellite cable connection," Bhandari told IANS. What is making the service more attractive is the affordability and convenience it provides villagers. "From getting land records from the district collectorate to bringing their complaints about water and other problems to the notice of the district administration, villagers have stated using our services," said Arvind Labhi of Chaksu, 55 km from Jaipur. A postgraduate with basic training in computers, 24-year-old Labhi is one of 413 young entrepreneurs either engaged on a commission basis or employed by Aksh Broadband. Labhi is among those who have invested his own money to set up a kiosk. His lies in the heart of the Chaksu marketplace and serves a population of 18,000 people. From helping people get their land records without bribing any intermediary to providing computer horoscopes, matrimonial advertisements, satellite channel connections for Rs.125 a month, computer education, teleconferencing and links to wholesale markets, Labhi's kiosk has become an invaluable bridge. "At least 20-25 people come everyday to use our services for a nominal fee," said Suraj Devinder, a 30-year-old man who operates a kiosk in Dabri Rampura village, 40 km from Jaipur city. The encouraging response in just a few months has made Devinder plan ahead to add new features to his services that provide digital connectivity to 7,000 people in four villages. "In the initial stage, out of 290,000 people in our district 250,000 will be connected by Aksh kiosks. Covering an area of 11,000 square kilometres, it is the largest rural connectivity in the country and an outstanding example of sustainable development that can be replicated in other areas," claimed district magistrate Pant. Another attractive feature is the employment it is creating for young people like Labhi and Davinder who have not only been able to generate income for themselves but also provide jobs to at least one other person. The Aksh model has been attracting considerable interest not only within Rajasthan but other states like Haryana and developing countries like Mauritius and Senegal, which have sent officials for live demonstrations. --Indo-Asian News Service |
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