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Resolutions adopted by Chairpersons
of South Asia Foundation chapters - Mr. Kamal Hossain Bangladesh),
Mr. Lyonpo Sangay Ngedup (Bhutan), Mr. Inder Kumar Gujral (India),
Mr. Ibrahim Hussain Zaki (Maldives), Mr. Bhekh B. Thapa (Nepal),
Ms. Salima Hashmi (Pakistan), and Mr. Lakshman Kadirgamar Sri Lanka)
- at the meeting on 9-11 April 2002, at Beaulieu-sur-Mer, France.
The Chairpersons noted with satisfaction that
since the meeting arranged over an year ago by SAF at plexus Technology
at Vashi, India, in which IT Coordinators from the seven SAARC countries
participated, the final course of training in the use of updated
Dynamo portal suite at ATG Training Centre, Reading UK (March 4-12,
2002) has been successfully completed (Appendix I). SAF paid ATG
US$ 23,800.00 for training charges and US$ 55,000.00 for equipment
supplied by WorldSpace Foundation and travel expenses of the participants.
The Chairpersons were pleased with the Memorandum
of Understanding signed between WorldSpace Foundation and South
Asia Foundation (appendix II) which allows SAF a free-of-cost link
with AsiaStar satellite. They also acknowledged with thanks the
receipt of the related equipment comprising receivers and modems,
which SAF purchased at the cost of US$ 1, 600.00 from WorldSpace
Corporation - representatives of which also attended the workshop
at Reading, U.K. and instructed IT Coordinators in the use of the
equipment for wireless transmissions through AsiaStar satellite.
The Chairpersons noted with satisfaction that
SAF has successfully implemented a number of collaborations with
leading international institutions.
The World Bank's Development Gateway and SAF have mutually set up
a window to help communities, organisations, and individuals build
partnerships, share ideas, and work together to provide information
on development and education in the South Asian region.
SAF has a working relationship with the UNDP that allow users to
view carefully selected and filtered information on development
programmes being run by the two organisations in South Asia.
SAF has formalised a tie-up with the Professional Office of the
Youth Programme in the Division of Communications and Public Information
of the United Nations Environment Programme.
An agreement between SAF and UNICEF's Voices of Youth programme
is now under discussion as it is in tune with SAF's portal-related
activities. The other agencies that have been contacted are WHO,
EU, ECOSOC and UNHCR. The Chairpersons recommended that the SAF
portal should also establish links with the Asian Development Bank
(ADB) and the World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO).
The Chairperson appreciated that the SAF Information
and Documentation Centre, which Prof. Mahendra Lama has built at
33-A Vasant Marg, Vasant Vihar, New Delhi-11 0057, is now being
connected online not only with related institutions and universities
in SAARC countries but could be accessed worldwide.
The Chairpersons agreed that now that the SAF
portal could be uploaded directly by IT coordinators, it was their
responsibility to finish the job of collecting and feeding the portal
with in-depth basic information concerning their respective countries.
It was also decided that this job must be completed by the end of
July 2002, and arrangements made to update information periodically.
The Chairpersons endorsed the training programme
on "Integrated Education, Health and Capacity Building for
Adolescent Girls" in which vulnerable girls in SAARC countries
will be given training in computers - thus enabling them to take
up more lucrative and "respectable" professions. To begin
with, a nine-month training course has already started at Maiti
Nepal on March 30, 2002, at which 25 girls are being trained by
SAF IT Coordinator in Kathmandu. The Chairpersons approved the request
from Ms. Anuradha Koirala, Director of Maiti Nepal, through SAF
Chairperson-Nepal Ambassador Thapa for 10 more computers as the
5 computers Maiti has are not sufficient (Appendix III).
The Chairpersons agreed that a pilot project
of South Asian Studies be established at the University of Bangladesh
Rural Advancement Committee (BRAC), and linked with other institutions
and universities in SAARC and other countries. The establishment
of such a web on the SAF Online system would promote regional cooperation
as it will enable students to qualify not only in South Asian studies
but allow them a wider choice of the subjects taught in any of the
other institutions.
The Chairpersons were pleased with the efficient
and dedicated manner in which the Scouts Association in Bhutan organised
the SAARC Rainbow Scouts Friendship Camp in Thimpu (February 21-26,
2002). This cultural pageant of dance and music was attended by
over five hundred boys and girls hailing from all the seven countries
(see brochure Appendix IV). The total cost of organising this event
worked out to be US$ 118,500.00 out of which US$ 77,500.00 was spent
on travel by air, rail and road. It was agreed that similar scouts
friendship camps should be annually organised in turn among the
seven SAARC countries and as requested by the Bharat Scouts &
Guides Association in India the next Friendship Camp in 2003 be
organised in India (Appendix V); and the 2004 Camp be held in Maldives
- thus alternating between a big and a small country.
The Chairpersons expressed satisfaction at the
launching of a SAF Community e-mail Service which will allow for
the next one year unlimited interaction among scouts and girl-guides
who participated in the Scouts Friendship Camp in Bhutan. The youngsters
will be able to use this free-of-cost facility to write essays and
stories about their mutual experiences during the camp and after
they returned home. The Chairpersons approved the proposal that
the winners of best essays and stories be nominated as "SAF
Goodwill Ambassadors" and will be invited to participate in
the next Friendship Camp in 2003.
The Chairpersons approved the financial support
of US$ 5,790.00, which SAF provided for the documentary film on
the Scouts Friendship Camp produced by Ekushey TV in Bangladesh
in cooperation with Bhutan and the other SAARC countries. They agreed
that this film should be the first of a series of documentaries
on themes of regional cooperation and development to be shown not
only on South Asian TV channels but also internationally - a project
which is now being formulated by a group of young TV entrepreneurs
in South Asia.
The Chairpersons endorsed the offer, which SAF
made in response to the request by the Sri Lankan Government (Appendix
VI) to match the contribution of SL 50 million Rupee allocated for
the proposed SAARC Cultural Centre in Kandy, Sri Lanka - a project
which was proposed by the SAARC Heads of State during the Summit
Meeting held in July 1998. The Centre would provide a focal point
where artists from SAARC member-states could gather and share their
artistic knowledge and widen their experiences in the performing
arts to foster mutual understanding among the people of the South
Asian region.
ln conformity with the decision taken by SAF
Conference in Kathmandu, the Chairpersons accepted the UNESCO proposal
to jointly organise the first Regional Conference for the SAARC
countries on "Youth in the Contemporary Information Society
- Needs, Role and Policies" (Appendix VII). The estimated cost
of US$ 30,000.00 will be equally shared between UNESCO and SAF and,
at UNESCO's request, the Conference will be organised by the UNESCO's
Regional Office in India and held on November 22-25, 2002, at the
SAF office premises in New Delhi.
Chairpersons decided that to avoid controversy,
SAF portal should focus only on IT-related grassroots projects undertaken
by SAF as well as on the related work being carried out by other
NGOs and research institutions in the field of regional cooperation
in SAARC countries and not on political news and views.
The Chairpersons recommended that two SAF scholarships
(a girl and a boy) from each of the seven SAARC countries be given
stipend to study at the Asian College of Journalism, Chennai, and
those students who excel be given SAF fellowships enabling them
to travel in at least four of the seven SAARC countries for a period
of eight to twelve weeks and work on a theme relevant to regional
cooperation.
The Chairpersons decided that as regional cooperation
is SAF's leitmotif, only those national projects that satisfy the
following two criteria will qualify for SAF support:
That the proposed national projects must be linked
to similar educational and development projects in at least two
other SAARC countries and;
That Chairpersons proposing a project shall make a matching contribution
in order to equalise with SAF's financial assistance. Worldwide
experience shows that organisations such as SAF can hardly function
effectively and sustain themselves unless all the participating
partners have a stake in their achievements and share equal responsibility
and costs of projects.
The Chairpersons decided that should the following
national projects already funded by SAF continue, they must also
conform to the above mentioned criteria: (a) The IT Training workshop
for teacher trainers in two National Institutes of Education in
Bhutan in which 58 teachers have been trained by Sunrise Computer
System at a total cost of US$ 10,000.00/- (Appendix VIII). (b) Establishment
of a Computer Laboratory at Adh. Atoll AEC, Maldives to which SAF
contributed US$ 40,842.00/- (Appendix IX). (c) A request from the
Principal, Government College in Lahore, Pakistan, for a Visiting
Faculty of Computer Sciences for which an Associate Professor and
a Lecturer will be employed for the next two years at the total
cost of US$ 40,000.00/- (Appendix X). (d)The project undertaken
by Sarvodaya Suwasetha Sewa Society, Sri Lanka, to house and rehabilitate
teenage mothers, to which SAF contributed a sum of US$ 9,100.00
(Appenxix XI).
The forty Model Health Sub-Centres (Adarsh Swastha
Up-Kendras) called Sumitra Solar Clinics in Bastar tribal areas
in India, built at the cost of US$ 400,000.00, are functioning satisfactorily
and now the Chhattisgarh government has proposed that 14 Sumitra
IT Booths be added in Block HQs in Bastar (Appendix XII).
The Chairpersons decided that hereafter only
the name South Asia Foundation will be used and not Rainbow Partnership
Organization (RPO). Thus, the respective chapters in each country
will be called SAF-Bangladesh, SAFBhutan, SAF- India and so on,
and the related nomenclatures will be modified accordingly.
The Chairpersons endorsed the letter which SAF
Chairman-India, Hon'ble Inder Kumar Gujral, has written to Ambassador
QAMA Rahim (Appendix XIII), requesting the SAARC Secretary-General
to expedite SAF's recognition as a Regional Apex body under the
SAARC/SUMMIT9/CM.1 8/3 rules.
The chairpersons promised to expedite registrations
of SAF Chapters in their respective countries and open bank accounts
to which SAF Trustees could transfer the required funds from abroad.
The Chairpersons accepted the proposal made by
Hon'ble Lyonpo Sangay Ngedup during the SAF Conference in Kathmandu
(December 11-12, 2001), that a system of video-conferencing be established
between the seven SAF chapters to be used for expeditious implementation
of SAF projects.
The Chairpersons felt that as Afghanistan is
a part of South Asia, a way should be found to help the country
which is in need of dire assistance as a result of the devastation
caused by war. They decided to set up a committee comprising Mr.
Inder Kumar Gujral, Dr. Kamal Hossain and Mr. Madanjeet Singh to
study the feasibility of incorporating Afghanistan as South Asia
Foundation's eighth Chapter.
Madanjeet Singh
UNESCO Goodwill Ambassador
Founder, South Asia Foundation
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