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‘Digital Bangladesh’ pays off in the pandemic


Published : 16 May 2020 10:02 PM | Updated : 07 Sep 2020 03:24 PM

The ‘Digital Bangladesh’ campaign of the ruling Awami League is paying off in the time of crisis due to coronavirus pandemic, ministers say, as millions of people are taking the services online.

“Government is making people aware of the disease in every possible way and it is working,” information minister Muhammad Hasan Mahmud said.

State minister for ICT Zunaid Ahmed Palak said over 85 lakh people visited the website - corona.gov.bd - in 60 days of its launching on March 20, days after the first coronavirus cases were found in Bangladesh on March 8.

“We have received over 74 lakh phone calls for information and services in our 333 number which was launched by Prime Minister’s adviser Sajeeb Wazed Joy in 2018,” he said, adding that people are also suing the coronavirus testing tool app.

Both of them were speaking at a webinar through the Bangladesh Awami League’s official facebook page on Friday night moderated by Barrister Shah Ali Farhad, a special assistant of Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina.

Famed psychologist Prof Mehtab Khanam, Director of the health department’s Communicable Disease Control programme Prof Shalina Ferdous, Head of Dhaka Metropolitan Police's Counter Terrorism and Transnational Crime unit Monirul Islam, actor Riaz Ahmed and journalist Farzana Rupa spoke at the panel among others.

It was the first episode of the series of webinar the Awami League will host to make public aware of the pandemic.
The number of virus cases is close to 30,000 with 314 deaths as of Saturday in Bangladesh as the whole world is grappling to contain the novel virus.

However, Sheikh Hasina’s early intervention has been widely appreciated in the world. American business magazine Forbes said she showed her talents during this crisis.

“Bangladesh, a country of some 161 million people, led by Sheikh Hasina, is no stranger to crises. She was quick off her feet standing up to this one, with a response the World Economic Forum called “admirable”.

“Sheikh Hasina, the country’s longest serving Prime Minister, started evacuating Bangladeshi citizens from China in early February.“After the first case was diagnosed in early March, she closed educational institutions and nudged all non-essential businesses to go online.
“Then she harnessed tech, installing screening devices across international airports which screened some 650,000 people (of which 37,000 were immediately quarantined), something the UK still isn’t doing,” the Forbes wrote about Hasina.

The prime minister also rolled out three-year economic plan to overcome the impacts of the virus lockdown across the world that made many people jobless and plummeted country’s exports.

Digital Bangladesh was the campaign slogan of the Awami League before the 2008 elections when there was low internet penetration, and inadequate electricity generation in the country.

Bangladesh is now one of the top countries in the world in terms of improvement and remarkable growth in digital economy.
The information minister said they had been transmitting the messages through radio, television, and newspapers from the beginning.
“We have started the campaign even before the outbreak in our country,” he said, adding that they had involved all relevant stakeholders such as doctors, celebrities, actors, and actress in that effort.

Journalist Rupa seconded his comment and said the campaign is working. “Otherwise how could we be able to keep crores of children staying at home,” she said.

Monirul Islam of Counter Terrorism unit said pandemic law enforcement was also new to them, but they had been successful so far.
“‘A people-oriented police’ was our promise of Mujib Year this year and this pandemic helped us to keep that promise,” he said, referring to their works that involves almost everything from ‘the hospital doors to graveyard’.

Police are also involved with proper distribution of relief materials to the people, he said.
Over 2000 members of the police force are infected with the virus with seven deaths.

“It was completely new when it (virus) first emerged. Now we have SOP (standard operating procedure). Interpol also issued SOP recently,” he said.

He highlighted the challenges of keeping people inside homes and said it was very difficult to convince them particularly the young generation who thought the virus would not affect them.

Prof Mehtab Khanam acknowledged the difficulties of staying at home as she said ‘people love freedom’.
“All want to enjoy freedom. We miss freedom. We cannot go out now when we want. All feel constraint. Emotionally we feel bogged down,” she said.

“But people need to take responsibility. Freedom comes with responsibility. You will enjoy freedom by taking the responsibility of your own behavior of what will be the consequences,” she said, suggesting actions that would make people feel to be responsible.
She stressed on devising awareness messages in the language which is understandable to all.