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Brace
computer tech to fight poverty
Speakers
call at CPD, and Prothom Alo dialogue
Staff Correspondent, Khulna
04 May, 2003
Speakers at a dialogue yesterday
called for harnessing information
communication technology (ICT)
as means for cutting poverty.
The lack of basic ICT infrastructures,
including telecommunication and
able manpower, is presenting a
drag on the growth and excellence
of the sector, they observed.
They were speaking on "Information
and Communication Technology"
organised by the Centre for Policy
Dialogue (CPD) in collaboration
with The Daily Star and the Prothom
Alo at Millennium Inn in Khulna.
The speakers also called for providing
greater access to information,
lowering charges of telephone
and Internet and bringing Internet
gateway under a single platform
for preventing youngsters from
surfing 'unwanted' sites. The
dialogue was held under the regional
consultation meeting on National
Policy Review Forum 2003.
Prof Nowsher Ali, director of
Bangladesh Institute of Technology
(BIT), Khulna, attended the dialogue
as the chief guest with Dr Rafiqul
Islam, head of the Department
of Computer Science and Engineering
of the institute in the chair.
Prof Ali called on the civil society
to play a proactive role to take
the nation's ICT quest ahead.
He said, "We need to develop
technology keeping in mind our
own tradition which can reach
and benefit the grassroots people."
"We need to develop applied
technology for a knowledge-based
society." Dr Ananya Raihan,
a research fellow of CPD, said
Bangladesh's ICT policy lacked
vision for human resources development.
"The ICT policy does not
consider poverty alleviation issues,
it is rather business-centric
when it should be people-centric,"
he added. Raihan termed the vision
of the ICT policy 'highly ambitious'
as it wanted to establish a knowledge-based
society by 2006.
Putting the policy vision in question,
he asked: "How would they
be able to establish such a society
by 2006 when the literacy rate
took 32 years down the road of
independence to hit 50 per cent?"
He said the ICT sector was not
given due attention in the ICT
policy as well as in the government's
Interim Poverty Reduction Strategy
Paper.
Abu Syeed Khan, a taskforce member,
said Bangladesh's tele-density
in terms of fixed line stood at
0.6 per cent, a long way off many
South Asian countries. He, however,
said four mobile phone operators
in the private sector took the
number of their subscribers to
over 10 lakh. Focusing on interconnection,
he said, "It is still a big
hurdle to mobile communication."
Khan said 90 per cent of mobile
phone users had no access to mainstream
fixed line Bangladesh Telegraph
and Telephone Board (BTTB) connectivity
because of the absence of interconnection.
"Bangladeshi mobile phone
operators have formed a mobile-to-mobile
intercom rather than cellular
phone networks due to absence
of interconnection," he said.
Khan said the problem would be
resolved soon with the implementation
of a project. The BTTB has recently
signed a deal with private mobile
operators to provide more connectivity.
The BTTB has recently completed
Integrated Services Digital Network
(ISDN) that provides Internet
access at a speed of 125 kbps
(kilobyte per second) without
keeping the telephone lines busy.
The network has brought Dhaka,
Chittagong, Rajshahi, Sylhet and
Khulna closer.
"Educational institutions
can have their connection without
installing own VSAT (very small
aperture terminals) or subscribing
expensive lease lines," Khan
said. Anir Chowdhury, another
task force member, said the government
should put more emphasis on ICT
by doubling the opportunity for
its study. Chowdhury said the
government should patronise locally
developed software through incentives,
establish more IT parks ensuring
private sector participation,
train more IT teachers for spreading
the education, standardise IT
education by making it mandatory
for winning ISO certificate.
"To foster the growth of
ICT sector, the government should
make IT education compulsory up
to the degree level," he
added. Chowdhury said the government
should be more careful for raising
the standard of English as none
can excel in IT without skills
in the language. He said Bangladesh
had bright prospects in different
IT enabled services like call
centres due to outsourcing by
many developed nations. He said
Bangladeshis still use computer
as a typewriter without understanding
the flexibility, power and range
of the machine. Chowdhury called
for training government officials
for e-governance.
CPD Executive Director Dr Debapriya
Bhattacharya, who co-ordinated
the dialogue, said people should
be given greater access to information
to enable them to alleviate poverty.
Bangladesh still has opportunity
to use ICT knowledge for complex
land administration, which suffers
multifarious complexities, he
added.
Prof AKM Azad of BIT, Khulna said
there was no testing laboratory
to determine standard of e-products.
He demanded installation of a
countrywide fibre optic network
before hooking Bangladesh to the
information superhighway via a
submarine cable. "Otherwise,
we would not be able to harvest
desired benefit from the expensive
submarine cable network,"
he added.
Bangladesh has joined a consortium
of 12 countries with 14 operators
to get connected with the cyberway
at a cost of $720 million. Former
BTTB chairman Fazlur Rahman called
for allowing the private sector
to spread the fibre optic network.
"The private sector could
use PDB's power line network to
spread the fibre optic network,"
he said.
Dr Rafiqul Islam stressed people's
greater access to information.
He also underscored the need for
coordination between educational
institutions and industries to
develop modern products. Referring
to youngsters' interest in Internet
browsing, he said 90 per cent
of them surf unwanted sites. "There
should be a centralised gateway
to Internet to block youngsters'
access to unwanted contents,"
said Arief Hossin, a young IT
specialist.
G C Gosh and Dr Shibendra Shekhar
Sikder, both from BIT Khulna;
M A Quyyum, principal of Institute
of Library, Arts, Commerce and
Science; Feroja Begum, district
information officer, Khulna; Provash
Chandra Biswas of World Vision
and Mohammad Arief Hossain also
spoke.
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