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ADDRESS AT THE
CONVENTION OF THE NATIONAL ALLIANCE AND THE FIRST CONVOCATION OF THE
JAMESHEDJI TATA NATIONAL VIRTUAL ACADEMY
11-07-2005 : New
Delhi Knowledge Sources and System Integration
I am very happy to inaugurate the second convention on
National Alliance and the first convocation of the National Virtual
Academy (NVA) for rural transformation. The aim of National alliance
to achieve Mission 2007 that is to make every village a Knowledge
Centre, is indeed a noble mission. One of the important missions, is
generating capacity for creation of employment. If not, knowledge
centres will become ineffective. I am delighted to know that as a
first step the alliance partners are planning to connect 25,000
villages as Village Knowledge Centres. I am sure that ultimately the
National Alliance will be able to develop a user controlled, owned
and managed network which will help to reach the rural population in
terms of information, knowledge and skill empowerment.
Fellows of NVA
I have seen the composition of
NVA Fellows 2005. It is indeed a celebration of our rural core
competence. My greetings to the organizers, who have thought of such
innovative schemes to recognize and train the people who are wedded
to Rural development and empowering them to promote rural
transformation in certain areas. Particularly, the choice of fellows
such as Mr. Anwarji of Balipara, Assam with the core competence of
education, suitable for local people in areas such as literacy,
sanitation and use of ICT. Ms. Pushpa Ben of Village Sokhada,
Gujarat with the core competence on water conservation and vegetable
vending; Ms. Vijyantha Raut of Nimgoan Bhogi, Maharastra with the
core competence of social work particularly in micro credit
movement, Mr. Narsingh Singh from Charanwala Bajju village of
Rajasthan with the core competence of Computer education in rural
area; Mr. V. Deenadhayalan from Umbalchery village, Tamil Nadu with
the core competence of indigenous live stock keeping and also
practicing animal healing using herbal plants. This clearly
indicates the spectrum of experience of the fellows selected. It is
true for all the 140 fellows of NVA.

However I have a suggestion to give. NVA fellowships
in number of states like UP, Bihar and many more have to have
membership as in the case of states like Gujarat and Tamilnadu.
Now I would like to discuss, how these recipients of
fellowship can become the forerunners in transforming the rural
areas. Actually I am going to take a class for our friends fellows
(140 in number). You can also call it a Convocation Address to NVA
fellows. The topic I have selected for the lecture "Knowledge
Sources and System Integration".
This consists of five
parts: The first part gives some experiences with the knowledge
centres working at various places in the country; second part
presents purpose of Village Knowledge centres in relation to the
integrated development of Rural Areas of the country through PURA;
third part deals with the examples of PURA in action through three
PURA systems and also a design of Coastal PURA in association with
HUDCO; Fourth part presents the working Domain services for
effective knowledge acquisition to the PURA complexes; Fifth part
consolidates the flow chart of data needed for Farmers, fishermen
and also to the entire rural population in an integrated way for the
sustainable development. Particularly these aspects, NVA fellows may
like to know in detail.


Some Experience with Village Knowledge Centres
In June 2005, when I visited Nagapattinam, I have seen
the Village Resource Centre established by TATA Tsunami Relief
Committee in association with MSSRF at Akkaraipettai. When I
discussed with the young members who are operating the system, I
found they are helping the locals by imparting education through
computers, helping the Self Help Group Members to maintain their
accounts, providing weather and sea state forecast data, etc. While
it is very good, the important issue of providing a live data base
on various services to the fishermen and farmers needs to be
upgraded. This has to be a coordinated effort of various
institutions. I appreciate their contribution to the tsunami relief
and rehabilitation operations.

Last week, I inaugurated Six Village Resource Centre
from Ettimadi, Coimbatore district of Tamil Nadu, which has been
established by Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetam in partnership with ISRO.
They provide tele-education, tele-medicine services to the 6
villages located in Tamil nadu and Kerala through video
conferencing.

I also understand the RASI Scheme of Tamil Nadu
implemented at Mellur taluk in Madurai district is also providing
the knowledge connectivity to the villages. Which enables the local
unemployed youth to setup the village kiosks to provide computer
literacy among the villagers, Internet access through CorDECT
Wireless system with a limited bandwidth and enables small value
added services through computers with digital photographs, email
access. This also helps the villagers to get birth certificates from
the local government authorities and get the health care advice from
the Madurai Aravind Eye hospital through email.

I appreciate the efforts taken by these organisations
for knowledge enabling the villagers the Village Knowledge Centres.
These VKCs will act as a tool for the delivering the knowledge. How
to equip the VKCs with knowledge and purpose in an integrated way
with sustainable developmental framework is the challenge?
PURA (Providing Urban Amenities in Rural Areas)
Nearly 700 million people of India live in the rural
areas

in 600,000 villages. Connectivity of village complexes
providing economic opportunities to all segments of people is an
urgent need to bridge the rural-urban divide, generate employment

and enhance rural prosperity. We need to innovate to
increase

connectivities to the villages making clusters out of
them even while retaining their individualities. Essential
Connectivities: The integrated method

which will bring prosperity to rural India is called
PURA, which envisages four connectivities: the physical connectivity
of the village clusters through quality roads and transport;
electronic connectivity through tele-communication with high
bandwidth fiber optic cables reaching the rural areas from urban
cities and through internet kiosks; knowledge connectivity through
education, skill training for farmers, artisans and craftsmen and
entrepreneurship programmes. These three connectives will lead to
economic connectivity through starting of enterprises with the help
of banks, micro credits and marketing of the products. We need to
establish approximately 7000 PURA Complexes in the country
encompassing approximately 2.3 lakh Village Panchayats.
Village Knowledge Centres - Configured
For
providing the knowledge connectivity to the PURA complexes, Village
Knowledge Centres will act as frontline delivery system. I visualize
establishment of village knowledge centers in these Panchayats to
empower the villagers with the knowledge and to act as a local
center for knowledge connectivity for the villagers within the
overall framework of PURA.
VKC: The Village Knowledge
Centre should provide the essential data required for the targeted
population such as farmers, fishermen, craftsmen, traders,
businessmen, entrepreneurs, unemployed youth and the students. It
has to be acquired by visiting the village, talking to the rural
people, by understanding their requirement and core competence.
Providing meteorological data for both farmers and fishermen has to
be area specific, covering say 20 or 30 villages in the vicinity of
sea coast or in the farming area. Local relevance of information
offered is essential. Users have simple needs of information but
often it is a tough problem for system integrators because of the
need of updation of data. Trained manpower with experience have to
be deployed to generate information which can explain to the people
in simple terms the meteorological data, weather data, marketing
data on fish, agricultural and other rural commodities. These data
have to come from various connected institutions which provide the
service to the people on a timely basis periodically. But the
transformation of data into user friendly information on a regular
updated basis is the real challenge. The main focus of the Village
Knowledge Centre should be to empower the youth to undertake
development tasks of the villages and establish the rural
enterprises which will provide large scale employment to the youth
of the village. So, it is essential to skill enable and knowledge
enable through the Academic institutions, industry, banking and
marketing institutions. VKC should act as a facilitator. Blended
knowledge is a better knowledge.
Infrastructure and
Connectivity: A low cost multi-task handheld computer with GPS
and wireless mobility should be developed by the private industries
and organisations and should reach the fishermen and farmers in
different parts of the country. They should add value to this tool
for their benefit to increase their earning capacity. Village
Knowledge Centre should have a computer terminal, wireless (Wi-Max)
connections or fibre broadband or satellite connectivity to connect
to the Nodal Centres for acquisition of knowledge and dissemination
of updated real time data.
Nodal Data Centre and
Services: Each PURA should have "Nodal PURA Knowledge Data
centres", which should be the HUB for all the activities creating
the vibrancy in the PURA as a viable sustainable business
proposition. These ?Nodal PURA Knowledge Data Centres? should be
linked to the nominated domain service providing organisations in
Agriculture including fisheries, Cottage and Small scale industries
and commerce, Education and human resource development and health
care sectors. These domain institutions will have a mechanism to
create continuously updated information systems needed to service
the Village Knowledge Centres.
With this experience, we
should make the village resource centres as the knowledge centres in
the villages in a fully connected environment with a mission of
skill and knowledge enabling people leading to sustainable economic
development in the rural areas. Now I would like to discuss about
the working PURA models where the focus is on Employment generation.


PURA in Action
I have visited many rural areas, and I have seen some
working systems of PURA such as Gujarat and Rajasthan Border - BAIF
model, Vallam Periyar PURA model near Thanjavur, Isletwald Village
in Switzerland. I have also recently visited Tsunami affected
villages of Nagapattinam and suggested the implementation as
"Coastal PURA" to the Nagapattinam District Administration and
Rehabilitation Planning agencies. Through the study of these PURA
Models, NVA fellows will get a feeling of the requirement of
knowledge in our village setup to bring sustainable prosperity to
our villages.
Bharatiya Agro Industries Foundation (BAIF)
Model: I would like to share with you an integrated village
cluster

development programme which I experienced during my
visit with Dr. Narayan G Hegde, an IIM graduate who is an expert in
farming and dairying, two village clusters of south Gujarat - Chonda
and Lachakadi, with a population of 5000. In these villages every
summer the tribal people migrate to nearby towns. The BAIF model was
installed in these two villages with peoples' co-operation and the
participation of state authorities. Firstly water harvesting was
undertaken to get water for every individual. Every home was
provided with livestock and also a market for milk. Simultaneously,
fruit orchards were established with various fruit crops such as
cashew and mangoes, which are tolerant to drought. When I visited,
these villages, there was a connecting road and water ponds. The
tribal population, with radiant smiles on their faces, was
harvesting crops, packaging and carrying milk to different supply
points. I happened to see the economic growth and prosperity of the
tribal people, which has been facilitated by BAIF with people's
participation. I understand that this model - Vadi (Orchard) has now
been replicated in many places by the state governments of
Maharashtra, Gujarat and Rajasthan. The project was implemented
through Self Help Groups (SHGs). The groups took the responsibility
to help the weaker members. This boosted progress. The results were
phenomenal. In Ghatol cluster in Udaipur out of 3000 poor families,
more than 90% were able to earn Rs. 20,000 per annum. Efficient
watershed development not only helped to ensure the availability of
safe drinking water throughout the year but also boosted their crop
yields from 30% to 80%. Over 800 hectares of Anola orchards were
established for the first time in the region, which started yielding
from the third year. The farmers groups have started processing and
marketing the fruits. The entire village cluster was self-sufficient
in food supply. Dairy and animal husbandry further boosted their
family income from 30 to 60%. These families had formed 71 Self Help
Groups and 24 village level organizations. They have built their own
corpus of Rs. 30 lakhs. Similar success was achieved in Banswada
district. In Gokulpura cluster in Bundi district in Rajasthan,
watershed based multi-disciplinary development facilitated the local
farmers to grow two crops during the year while the entire district
was receiving food aid under the drought relief. This happened in a
region where the average annual rainfall is less than 700 mm and the
region was facing chronic drought successively for the third
year.
Periyar PURA - Transformation of Rural Society:
Last year I had visited Periyar Maniammai College of Technology for
women and inaugurated a project called Periyar PURA (Providing Urban
amenities in Rural Areas) Complex. Over 65 villages near Vallam,
Thanjavur district of Tamilnadu, have been transformed as a PURA
Cluster. This PURA complex has all the three connectivities ?
physical connectivity, which has a circular road and interconnecting
roads covering major villages along with bus transport system, it
provides electronic connectivity through internet kiosks and
knowledge connectivity through its academic background - leading to
economic connectivity to the 65 villages.
The centre of
activity emanates from the women

engineering college that provides the electronic and
knowledge connectivity. Periyar PURA has health care centres,
primary to post graduate level education and vocational training
centres. This has resulted in large scale employment generation and
creation of number of entrepreneurs with the active support of 850
self-help groups.
They have innovative water management
schemes for irrigation and providing potable water for all the
village citizens. All 65 Periyar PURA villages are having only rain
fed irrigation. Two hundreds acres of waste land has been developed
into cultivable land with innovative water management schemes such
as contour ponds and water sheds for storing and irrigating the
fields. All the villagers are busy

in either cultivation, planting Jatropha, herbal and
medicinal plants, power generation using bio-mass, food processing
and above all running marketing centres. Due to shortage of rainfall
in that locality, farmers were suffering due to scarcity of water
not only for agriculture but also for drinking purposes. Keeping
this in mind, Periyar PURA developed six percolation ponds and five
check dams to harness the rain water amounting to 2.73 lakh cubic
meter per year. This water is supporting the irrigation of 300 acres
of land through recharging their open wells and bore wells. It also
supplies drinking water to the people. Periyar PURA has also
developed alternate practices such as Contour lands, check dams
across natural streams for water conservation and developed a model
for irrigation for conservation of water. More than 5000 farmers are
benefiting from this program. This example will be useful for water
management in PURA complexes. Recently Periyar PURA has brought
number of employment oriented schemes to the Tsunami affected
Nagapattinam villages and trained the Self-Help Groups on the Tiles
making, paper manufacturing, alternative building blocks
manufacturing and number of commonly used items required in the
rural and urban market. This single women engineering college have
empowered the villagers through the skill oriented training,
provision of finance and provision of market connectivity for their
produce.
Iseltwald Village in Switzerland - a PURA like
model: I also visited a small fishing village named Iseltwald in
Switzerland. It is on South shore of lake Brienz. It is a well known
fishing village with popular lake side restaurants. It has unspoiled
nature tranquility and relaxation in fresh air with quality
environment. It can be accessed by road and waterways. It has a
total population of 410 people and an area of approximately one
square kilometers. The main enterprise of the village is tourism and
fishing. They have got a school and playgrounds in the centre of the
village. The people in the village are employed in looking after the
tourists and running hotels, fishing, working in vineyards and
breweries. 5 to 10% of the people go to neighbouring towns for

employment. Total employment and the value added
products provide higher income to all the residents of the village.
This leads to higher standard of living which is equivalent to
staying in any one of the cities and also the availability of
facilities through connectivity so that the villagers remain in
their villages without migrating to cities. Education facilities,
healthcare centres and employment opportunities are all available
within the village itself like what we envisage in the PURA.
Coastal PURA: When I visited Nagapattinam, after
reviewing the Tsunami rehabilitation schemes, I proposed the
creation of Coastal PURAs in this region, which is an ideal solution
for bringing sustainable prosperity to this region. The salient
features of this PURA are the following:
1. Physical
Connectivity: Construction of jetties and small and medium sized
boat landing centres on the coast in the interval of 10 to 15 km
range. Each of these will have a good link road to the main coastal
road. Establishment of Community Sheds for repair of nets, storing
the nets and related equipments of the fishermen and Boat building
and repair small scale industries.

2. Electronic Connectivity: All the fishing
villages on the coastal areas have to be linked with the District
Headquarters through the Broadband fibre and wireless
connectivities. Fishermen should be provided with

broadcasting facilities through Satellite radios and
HAMSAT network. Mobile cell phone with GPS facility may be provided
for each boat for emergency communication. This will also provide
the local fishing population data, local meteorological and local
sea state data through SMS from the Ground Village knowledge Centres
obtained from near by the Meteorological station, Disaster
Management stations, District Headquarter station and the other
service providers.
3. Knowledge Connectivity:
Government should facilitate the training of fishermen in cost
effective safe fishing techniques, application of technology for
improving the productivity, storage and preservation systems and
cost effective marketing, banking & financing systems through
the District Headquarters Studio and the connected village knowledge
centers. It will also provide adequate warning data for the
fishermen on the sea to return to home safely.
4.
Economic Connectivity: These three connectivities will
motivate and enable the local population to create Cold

Storage infrastructure, Fish processing and packaging
and marketing for realizing the value added price. This will also
provide alternative employment oriented schemes during non-fishing
days and for people who are involved in agriculture and other
activities. Here I would like to appreciate the work of Alaimagal
Self Help Group who in partnership DRDA and NGO's have successfully
captured an export order of quality candles and other crafts
products to Netherlands. Such economically oriented job creating
activities should be the objective of our rural development schemes.
So far, we saw certain live PURAs in action and the Village
Knowledge Centres. How do we get the periodically updated and
relevant information to the Village Knowledge Centres, so that the
best knowledge base is available to the farmers, fishermen and the
craftsmen for making the product competitive and bring prosperity to
the Village complexes particularly with the focus of employment
generation.
Domain Service Provider for PURA Complex
I have studied a system which is working and used by the farmers and
fishermen in different parts of the country. This is called the
Kisan Call Centre (KCC) established by the Ministry of Agriculture
in partnership with TCIL (Telecommunication Consultant India Ltd) a
Government Enterprise under Ministry of Communication and
Information Technology. Kisan Call Centre offers three levels of
interaction and

support in Agriculture, fisheries and Animal Husbandry
domains through the nationally nominated experts and Corresponding
directorates at the Central level. In the last one year of its
operation the call centre have provided consultancy, information,
assistance and guidance to over 5 lakhs callers from the villages of
eight states. Anywhere in India, people can call 1551 as a toll free
number to get the services. The top users of the scheme are
Maharastra and Tamil Nadu followed by UP and Rajasthan. I have
studied some of the typical questions answered by the call centres,
which I would like to share with you. Particularly the fellows of
NVA would like to take a note of it.

1. Question from Warangal: In cotton, what are
the suitable varieties to be taken and when can we avail the
varieties?
2. Question from Anathapur: What is the
seed treatment of Groundnut with dosage?
3. Question from
Cuddapah: What are the ways to get the Citrus fruits ripened
quickly?
4. Question from Indore: In which market will
I get good price for my cotton produce?
5. Question from
Jalandhar: What is the method of controlling yellowing in Paddy
nursery?

These questions were answered by the Kisan call centre
agricultural and fisheries specialists in level-1, level-2
agricultural and fisheries experts and level-3 directorate officials
and enabled the farmers to implement the suggestions. This is the
working system for providing domain services in the field of
agriculture, fisheries and animal husbandry. NVA fellows can
interact with Kisan call centres and use their information for their
respective States.
Now I would like to mention the typical
knowledge requirements of two areas: Agriculture and Fishing.





PURA Nodal Knowledge Data Centre - Flow Chart
As we have seen in the Kisan Call Centre setup,
similar Domain Service Provider Call centres are required in the
filed

of Commerce and Industry, Entrepreneurial skill
Development and employment generation, Travel and Tourism, Banking
and Insurance, Meteorological forecasting, Disaster Warning systems,
Education and Human Resource Development and Health care.
These call centers will act as a service provider to the
PURA Nodal Knowledge Data Centres located in the PURA Complexes,
which in turn will provide the area specific and customized
knowledge to the Village Knowledge Centres in the villages in a
holistic manner.


Conclusion
Technology is the instrument for providing non-linear
growth to our economy. Hence PURA is driven by technology for
sustainable rural development which will bridge the rural urban
divide. Knowledge of technology is the means to lead to the
generation of employment potential for realizing sustainable rural
prosperity. This in turn will have a multilayered coordinated
mechanism and system engineering of the existing units among the
various domain service provider institutions, transmitting agencies,
nodal agencies, village knowledge centres and the users.

It is a process to achieve the delivery of right
knowledge, at the right place and at the right time to our rural
population. Village Knowledge Centre is one of the essential
component for realizing our goal of graduating into a knowledge
society and lead to the transformation of the nation into a
developed country before the year 2020.
As we all know,
there have been many and many attempts across the country in taking
ICT to rural areas with a view to provide sustainable and scalable
development. But, each of the proponents of these efforts is
passionately attached to the core idea and continues to pursue this
even when it does not make any economic sense or when it is proven
that they are not scalable or sustainable. Some of these efforts are
successful only when centered on a creative leader. What we need now
is a serious and an impartial review to decide on the best practices
for nation wide deployment ? a best of breed solution for
sustainable PURA. For this the role of the fellows of NVA and its
leadership is important.

I would like to once again congratulate all the
fellows, and my best wishes to all the participating agencies and
the members of National Alliance in their Mission of realizing the
Village Knowledge Centres as the frontline knowledge delivery
systems in the villages.

May God Bless you.

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