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Getting a passport could soon be hassle free | If long queues outside shoddy passport offices gives you the jitters and, the thought of brokers and touts stops you from getting your passport by right, here is some good news for passport seekers.
Getting a passport will soon be hastle free with the revolutionisation of the
current process, which at best, can be described as arduous. It is learnt that
External Affairs Minister S.M. Krishna, who hails from IT city Bangalore and,
is very tech savvy, is walking that extra mile to facilitate the implementation
of the landmark Passport Sewa E- Governance initiative. Sevety-seven hi-tech state-of-the-art
IT-enabled Passport Sewa offices are likely to come up across the country under
the new initiative. Krishna recently inspected two such centers in Bangalore .
The presence of cutting-edge technology such as a centralised IT system, which
includes a data centre and a disaster recovery centre to which, all proposed centers
will be connected, biometric verification, availability of online services for
fixing appointments, three national call centers and a grievance redressel system,
status of application via SMS and outsourcing of front-end activities, acquiring
a passport will be easier and simpler. If that''''s not all, the 24x7 national
call centre in 17 languages will also be a part of the new project. The Passport
Sewa project is a perfect example of public-private partnership, involving the
Ministry of External Affairs and Tata Consultancy Services. Keeping in view security
and sensitivity, the MEA has not surrendered sovereign functions to the TCS and
has only outsourced front-end activities. If fully implemented, then a passport
can be got in three days following police verification. Tatkal applicants could
get the passport the same day. Currently, it takes around 30 to 45 days for non-Tatkal
passports and a minimum of seven days for getting a Tatkal-routed passport. Under
the proposed system, the number of public dealing counters will also increase
from the current figure of 345 to 1250. Public dealing hours will also increase
from four to seven hours. According to sources, new centres could come up at Gurgaon,
Vijayawada , Tirupati, Hubli, Dharwad, Mangalore, Baroda , Rajkot , Kottayam,
Hoshiarpur, Ludhiana , Ambala, Varanasi , Kanpur , Jodhpur and Sikar etc. Although
the project looks impressive, it also has its share of problems and challenges.
The IT-enabled project could leave many passport officials out of work. Already,
unions in passport offices have opposed the proposal. The other big challenge
will be to train underskilled MEA staff on cutting-edge technology. |
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