Bangladesh
will soon be poised to take full advantage of all the
business and development benefits promised by the
information age, thanks to the fruitful collaboration
between the Government of Bangladesh, private industry,
and the JOBS/IRIS Project over the past two years. A
seminar at the Sheraton Hotel on October 28, 2002,
celebrated the achievements of that collaboration and
planned for the work ahead.
The seminar was jointly
sponsored by the Ministry of Science and Information and
Communication Technology (),
the Bangladesh Association of Software and Information
Systems (),
and JOBS/IRIS. It presented the importance of the legal
and regulatory framework for economic growth across the
world, and reviewed the proposed
, with a focus on the
benefits it promises to electronic commerce, and to
information and communication technology (ICT)-based
enterprises in Bangladesh.
The draft IT law
addresses some of the key stumbling blocks to online
transactions. Its enactment will:
- Enable electronic records to have the same validity as
paper documents and to allow their use as evidence in
court cases;
- Allow electronic signatures to legally satisfy written
signature requirements; and
- Permit electronic payments.
The enabling legal
environment established by the draft IT law will help
businesses use ICT to improve their productivity and
lower operational costs, improve the competitive
position of Bangladesh in world markets, and encourage
the widespread use of information and communication
technology among large and small entrepreneurs.
The
of the seminar included a
on IT initiatives (including the
recently enacted
) presented by Mr. Asahabur Rahman, Joint
Secretary of MOSICT, while Justice (retired) Naimuddin
Ahmed and Secretary Ikteder Ahmed of the Law Commission
described the approach followed by IT Act to foster the
legal and regulatory framework for IT-based growth.
International
participants included Jody R. Westby, president of The
Work-IT Group, a U.S.-based consulting company
specializing in e-commerce and cybercrime legal and
regulatory issues, and ICT industry sector development.
She discussed the
ICT presents
for developing countries and their impact on government
policy and the legal and regulatory framework. Ms.
Westby also commented on the draft IT Law and
to promote Bangladesh's ICT industry
sector. Angelo Faria, a legal officer with the United
Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL),
spoke about
and
and the role they have played
in the global developing legal framework for ICTs.
Honorable Minister
Mr. Abdul Moyeen Khan, Minister of MOSICT was the chief
guest for the morning session where the legal and
regulatory aspects of ICT sector was discussed.
Honorable Minister Mr. Amir Khosru Mahmud Chowdhury, was
the chief guest for the sessions that discussed the
private sector participation and success stories in
Bangladesh. Mr. Karar M. Hassan, Secretary of the MOSICT,
chaired both sessions.
Among the other guests at
the seminar are Mary Ann Peters, U.S. Ambassador to
Bangladesh, Gene George, Director of USAID, and Thierry
van Bastelaer of IRIS. JOBS/IRIS was represented by
Director Imran Shauket. |