The people behind this novel idea – Nicholas Dunlop, executive director, EarthAction, a UK-based voluntary organisation; Bert Koenders a British Parliamentarian and Congress Member of Parliament Mani Shankar Aiyar, had a meeting with Chief Minister S M Krishna on July 16, 2001. IT secretary Vivek Kulkarni is expected to co-ordinate the efforts in putting this project together.
The e-Parliament, will primarily function in three stages:
- Initially, the e-Parliamentarians, across the globe, will poll and adopt a resolution setting a definite goal.
- With this mandate, a team of professionals will develop a set of proposals to achieve the target. A dialogue will be convened with key citizens, voluntary organisations, legislators and international officials. Consultation would take place both online and offline.
- Those proposals involving national legislation will be introduced in the e-Parliament for a non-binding vote; if passed, they will be referred to the individual national Parliaments for voting.
A conglomerate of industry players and Parliamentarians will be established to explore the funding possibilities for this project. The initiators hope that the e-Parliament itself might become a means for disbursing funds through UN agencies.
According to Nicholas Dunlop, Bangalore will be the hub of the e-Parliament activity because of the city’s abundant software and technical talent.
The e-Parliament is initially expected to include 25,000 democratically elected Parliamentarians from about 130 countries.
Also see:
- eGovernments Foundation
- Bangalore One Service Centre
- Karnataka wins AGT Award for e-Governance
Karnataka Government’s ambitious e-Governance project ‘Nemmadi’, which was being implemented to deliver various G2C and B2C services for the citizens of rural Karnataka has won the Asia’s premier Government Technology Award.Talking to newspersons here today, M N Vidyashankar, Secretary Department of IT, BT and Science and Technology, said ‘Nemmadi’ intended to bridge the digital divide and deliver various pro-people programmes adopted by the State Government. - e-Governance: Tardiness BBMP name!
Bangalore might be a technology hub at the global level. But the local that governs the IT City is still miles away, as far as using technology in delivering service to its citizens, is concerned. - Karnataka to introduce Online regst of properties
Karnataka government is toying with an idea of registering immovable properties Online to curb corruption, Revenue Minister Jagadish Shettar said today. Speaking to newsmen here, he said he had directed the officials of the department to submit a report to him in two months. If this was done, anyone could register their property in any Sub Registrar’ -
Bhoomi chief Rajeev Chawla bag PM’s award
The Prime Minister’s Awards for Excellence in Public Administration for 2005-06 have been won by Mr Rajeev Chawla, IAS, Secretary, Government of Karnataka, and Mr R S Pandey, IAS, Secretary, Ministry of Steel.
Mr Chawla receives the award for implementing ‘Bhoomi’, a computerised land records system for delivery, updating and safe storing of land records in Karnataka. Bhoomi enables citizens to access their land records easily and ensures transparency in the management of these records. On line access and creation of electronic database of land records has obliterated the need for manual rewriting and updating of land records. -
BangaloreOne yet to deliver on promises
It has been over a year since BangaloreOne set shop as a one-stop billing centre for public utilities, but it is yet to deliver on its promises. Some of the high demand services, like issue of katha certificates and renewal of passport, are still not available at the centres. Though payment of Bescom and BWSSB bills are accepted, the statement of accounts for the same are not provided. Similarly, while payment of property tax for residential properties is accepted, property tax for commercial properties is not collected. -
Land records in Karnataka go online
It takes just two minutes — faster than cooking noodles — to get land records in Karnataka. Land records, that used to be manually maintained by 9,000 village officials and took endless queues and unsavoury demands at the sub-registrars’ offices, is now just a computer print-out. -
Hassan CMC website is caught in a time-warp
The apathetic condition of the website launched by the Hassan CMC is a recent example of how scant disregard for the objectives of the government coupled with the ignorance of the authorities can result in wasting of public money. -
Engineering Students to handle e-governance in state
Move over exams and textbooks. The technocrats are coming, that too straight out of college campuses! Engineering students in Karnataka will now handle e-governance initiatives of the state government. In a novel scheme aimed at addressing e-governance glitches faced by several government departments, the Board for IT Education Standards (BITES) in association with the IT department and IBM has launched Project INVITE (Initiative to Nurture a Vibrant Information Technology Ecosystem). - BDA’s e-pragati not so ‘e’asy after all
- BDA’s E-Pragati kiosks to help citizens
- E-Governance is IT city’s new passion
- Simputers to simplify Bhoomi