This story is from November 4, 2002

Villagers learn how to get wired up and fight babudom

MUMBAI: Faced with a sudden spurt of development like a special economic zone, the proposed international airport and an international IT services centre, the villagers of Navi Mumbai have begun learning and embracing information technology.
Villagers learn how to get wired up and fight babudom
MUMBAI: Faced with a sudden spurt of development like a special economic zone, the proposed international airport and an international IT services centre, the villagers of Navi Mumbai have begun learning and embracing information technology.
A programme ‘One Village One Computer’ has been launched in 95 project-affected villages in the area to bridge the digital divide.
1x1 polls
Asmita S. J. a computer technologist and activist explained the aim was to empower the villagers and not just provide them connectivity. Asmita, who has studied various community computer projects in various states and countries added that while in the Warna sugar belt villages have been provided with computers it has been largely to facilitate the growth of the sugar industry and not to empower the villagers themselves. Krishna Khopkar, a veteran leader of the Kisan Sabha an organisation which fights for agricultural workers and has pioneered the computer network project, said the response to their training camps has been enthusiastic. The training has helped to create several youth cadres equipped with the necessary IT tools and community leadership skills. This has created a great deal of human knowledge capital at the local level.
The software which is in Marathi was created by M.S. Sridhar of Akruti Indian multilingual agency. Mr Khopkar said he thought of initiating such a project when he heard how people of one village parted with 40 acres of fertile land to City and Industrial Development Corporation (CIDCO) for the development of Navi Mumbai but got little compensation or benefits promised. The villagers who were promised 40 developed plots had not got any thing even 20 years after parting with their land.
Thousands of peasant families in surrounding villages have similar complaints. The villagers will be now able to communicate their problems with one another and take them up with officialdom and politicians. Similarly, agricultural workers in Nandurbar have organised themselves through the computer network. The Maharashtra Rajya Shet Mazdoor Union of agricultural workers has compiled a data base of 3000 landless labourers in Nandurbar district bordering Gujarat regarding various issues including their wages, house ownership, inclusion of names in the BPL (Below Poverty Line category), loans, health problems and drinking water availability . The work has begun yielding results. For example armed with facts and figures available from the data, a list of TB-affected labourers was placed before concerned government officials and they were forced to provide medical treatment, said Kumar Shiralkar, union leader.
The inspiration for this networking for the masses has come partly from Ashok Jhunjhunwala, a professor in IIT, Chennai, who is using IT for creating awareness among the masses, said activist Anil Shaligram. He said computer technology is also being used to tackle the problems of workers of 170 sugar factories spread over 16 districts of Maharashtra. Nearly a million workers, involved in sugarcane cutting, now feel threatened with the import of harvesting machines in Nandurbar and Pune districts. The machines will ultimately displace workers and add to joblessness in the countryside, said Kumar Shiralkar. Also several workers get injured during cane cutting. Now emails will be used to alert officials of the health and labour departments, the hospital and sugar factory about the mishaps.
End of Article
FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA