Government of India Comes Forward to Support Mission 2007: Every Village a
Knowledge Centre

 Subbiah Arunachalam
 Distinguished Fellow
 M S Swaminathan Research Foundation
 Chennai 600 113,  India

 New Delhi, 12 July 2005

 India's Finance Minister, Mr Palaniappan Chidambaram, announced today
that the Government of India would support the Mission 2007: Every
Village a Knowledge Centre, to the tune of Rs 65,000 million [roughly US
$1,500 million). He was speaking at the Second Convention of the National
Alliance for Mission 2007: Every Village a Knowledge Centre, held at New
Delhi.

 Conceived by Prof. M S Swaminathan, the man who brought in the Green
Revolution to India, the Mission aims to usher in a knowledge revolution
in India by connecting all the more than 600,000 villages of a India in a
knowledge network by 15 August 2007, the 60th anniversary of India's
Independence.

 After a series of meetings with a wide cross section of people from
government, academia, civil society organizations and corporations, Prof.
Swaminathan announced the Mission 2007 in mid 2004. As such a huge
programme cannot be undertaken by any single organization, Swaminathan
went on to build a National Alliance, perhaps the largest
 multi-stakeholder partnership in the field of ICT-enabled development in
the world. There are more than 150 members in the Alliance including the
University of California, Berkeley; MIT, Cambridge; IDRC, Ottawa; the
Nasscom Foundation, New Delhi, and OneWorld.

 The first convention of the National Alliance was held in New Delhi in
October 2004. The second convention took place in New Delhi on 11 and 12
July 2005. Among the people who spoke at the convention are His
Excellency the President of India Dr A P J Abdul Kalam; Mr P Chidambaram,
the Finanace Minister of India; Mr Mani Shankar Iyer, Minister for
Panchayati Raj; Mr M V Rajasekaran, Minister of State for Planning, and a
number of senior government officials.

 The President Of India, Dr Abdul Kalam was very happy to see more than
135 elected Fellows of the National Virtual Academy for Rural Prosperity
- all of them grassroots workers from rural India.

 Mr Mani Shankar Iyer suggested that the Village Knowledge Centres should
preferably be established in collaboration with the Panchayati Raj
(village level government) institutions and thus empower the village
level leaders and the communities.

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