By Farid Hossain, AP
JHARABARSHA, Bangladesh (AP)—Amina Begum had never seen a computer until a few years ago, but now she’s on Skype regularly with her husband. A woman on a bicycle brings the Internet to her.
JHARABARSHA, Bangladesh (AP)—Amina Begum had never seen a computer until a few years ago, but now she’s on Skype regularly with her husband. A woman on a bicycle brings the Internet to her.
Dozens of “Info Ladies” bike into remote Bangladeshi villages with
laptops and Internet connections, helping tens of thousands of
people—especially women—get everything from government services to chats with
distant loved ones. It’s a vital service in a country where only 5 million of
152 million people have Internet access.
The Info Ladies project, created in 2008 by local development group
D.Net and other community organizations, is modeled after a program that helped
make cellphones widespread in Bangladesh. It intends to enlist thousands more
workers in the next few years with startup funds from the South Asian country’s
central bank and expatriates working around the world.
D.Net recruits the women and trains them for three months to use a
computer, the Internet, a printer and a camera. It arranges bank loans for the
women to buy bicycles and equipment.
“This way we are providing jobs to jobless women and at the same time
empowering villagers with critical information,” said Ananya Raihan, D.Net’s
executive director.
The women—usually undergraduates from middle-class rural families—aren’t
doling out charity. Begum pays 200 takas ($2.40) for an hour of Skype time with
her husband, who works in Saudi Arabia.
Begum smiles shyly when her husband’s cheerful face pops up. With
earphones in place, she excitedly tells him she received the money he sent last
month. He asks her to buy farm land.
Even Begum’s elderly mother-in-law now uses Skype to talk with her son.
“We prefer using Skype to mobile phones because this way we can see him
on the screen,” Begum said, beaming happily from her tiny farming village in
Gaibandha district, 120 miles (192 kilometers) north of the capital, Dhaka.
In the neighboring village of Saghata, an Info Lady is 16-year-old
Tamanna Islam Dipa’s connection to social media.
The Info Ladies also provide a slew of social services—some for a fee
and others for free.
They sit with teenage girls where they talk about primary health care and
taboo subjects like menstrual hygiene, contraception and HIV. They help
villagers seeking government services write complaints to authorities under the
country’s newly-enacted Right to Information Act.
They talk to farmers about the correct use of fertilizer and
insecticides. For 10 takas (12 cents) they help students fill college
application forms online. They’re even trained to test blood pressure and blood
sugar levels.
“The Info Ladies are both entrepreneurs and public service providers,”
Raihan said.
Raihan borrowed the idea from Bangladeshi Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus,
who in 2004 introduced mobile phones to rural women who had no access to
telephones of any kind, by training and sending out scores of “Mobile Ladies”
into the countryside.
That hugely successful experiment drew in commercial mobile phone
operators. Now more than 92 million people in Bangladesh have cellphone access.
Nearly 60 Info Ladies are working in 19 of Bangladesh’s 64 districts. By
2016, Raihan hopes to train 15,000 women.
“It’s very innovative,” says Jamilur Reza Chaudhury, a pioneer of
information technology education in Bangladesh. “The project is really having
an impact on the people at grass-root level.”
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