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NEW DELHI, MARCH 13. Now Delhiites would no longer be required to make constant rounds of government offices and run from pillar to post to seek the status of various applications, licences or No Objection Certificates (NOCs). Thanks to the digital revolution sweeping the corridors of power in the Delhi Government, all this can now be accessed through internet, telephone or just simply by sending an SMS through your cellphone.

The Delhi Chief Minister, Sheila Dikshit, launching the web portal of Delhi Government in the Capital on Thursday.
Known as the Automatic Application Announcement System, this is something similar to what is used by the Railways and Mahanagar Telephone Nigam Limited (MTNL) to disseminate information about various sectors. Inaugurated by the Chief Minister, Sheila Dikshit, here today, the system in its initial stages would be implemented in the nine districts covering the Deputy Commissioners offices. It can be accessed through the internet on the Delhi Government portal, through telephone by calling 23392339 where the computer will indicate the status using interactive voice responses system and through cellphone by sending the ten digit acknowledgement number to 986823102. The system would immediately send back the status through an SMS.
Further giving impetus to the spread of Information Technology to the grassroots, Ms.Dikshit also inaugurated a complete web portal of the Delhi Government. The portal has been linked to all other departmental websites which would provide information at the click of the mouse. An exhibition of successful e-governance projects was also put up by the 23 Departments on the. occasion.
Speaking on the occasion, Ms. Dikshit said it was one of the golden goals of the Government to make Delhi a cyber city in the true sense of the word which entailed not only having cyber parks and kiosks but by making citizens use IT and avail of its benefits. In the process, Government had aimed at establishing a transparent, responsive and corruption free regime. Expressing satisfaction at the pace at which IT was being taken up in various Government Departments, Ms. Dikshit hoped that the goal of e-governance and computerisation would be achieved by the end of this year.
Ms. Dikshit also gave a call for bridging the digital divide and exhorted officers to work for implementing a system where even the most marginalised sections could avail the benefits of IT. Stressing the need to computerise all governments schools, the Chief Minister emphasised that projects should aim at benefiting children and women. She suggested that a system of rewarding and acknowledging officers and departments for their efficiency in implementing IT should be evolved. Giving out details of how the Delhi Government had gone about slowly and steadily unleashing a IT revolution in various fields, the Chief Minister said Delhi had started issuing computerised plastic driving licenses way back in 1999 much before the former United States of America president, Bill Clinton, was issued such a license in Hyderabad.
Further she said Delhi's Sales Tax Department was the first one in the country to be fully computerised connecting offices right from the ward to the Commissioner level. The MCD was perhaps the first civic body to implement its website project and the Delhi Government's Tender Information System was the first and only such web based system where tender notice details are uploaded directly by more than 250 tender issuing authorities. The Principal Secretary (IT), S. Regunathan, informed that a schedule had been put in place for all Departments to go online by December 2003 and warned that any delinquency on this front would be viewed seriously.
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