New Delhi, Jan 24 (IANS) Civil servants of six different African countries are being trained in India, learning leadership and governance related skills in a Mussoorie institute.
The National Centre for Good Governance (NCGG), an apex-level autonomous institution under the Union Ministry of Personnel, commenced a two-week Advanced Leadership Development Programme on Public Policy and Governance.
This programme is for civil servants from the African region and 36 senior officers from six countries, namely Eritrea, Kenya, Ethiopia, Tanzania, Gambia, and Eswatini are attending it, an official said.
Two-Week Advanced Leadership Development Programme on Public Policy and Governance for Civil Servants of the African Region was inaugurated today afternoon at NCGG, Mussoorie. 36 senior officers including Permanent Secretaries from six countries are participating in the programme pic.twitter.com/EOI5aOLJg6
— NCGG, Govt. of India (@NCGG_GoI) January 23, 2024
NCGG Director General and Secretary, DARPG, V. Srinivas, emphasised India's commitment to digital transformation, and highlighted the role of technology in bringing citizens closer to the government.
Shri V Srinivas discussed Effective Public Grievance Redressal, Unified Service Delivery Portals & Secretariat Reforms by e-Office reshaping governance landscape. He highlighted innovations at the district & state levels under PM’s Awards for Excellence in Public Administration. pic.twitter.com/NbO50Zbs0V
— NCGG, Govt. of India (@NCGG_GoI) January 23, 2024
Course Coordinator and Associate Professor at NCGG, Dr. A.P Singh said that the programme includes sessions on governance paradigms, digital technology in housing, Aadhar for good governance, land records modernisation, transparency in government procurement, rural property survey programmes, public-private partnerships, effective office administration, climate change policies, sustainable development goals, agriculture in India, public policy perspectives, and India-Africa relation along with institutional visit to PM Sangrahalaya, the DMRC, AIIMS, and the Taj Mahal.
Srinivas said that India's policy maxim of “Maximum Governance, Minimum Government" has focused on digital empowerment of citizens and digital transformation of institutions to bring citizens and government closer using technology, and the focus is on effective grievance redressal using CPGRAMS, secretariat reforms focused on e-services, and improving service delivery through integrated service portals.
The entire program will be supervised by Dr. A.P Singh, Course Coordinator and Associate Professor NCGG, Dr. M.K Bhandari, Associate Course Coordinator, and Shri Sanjay Dutt Pant, Program Assistant. pic.twitter.com/hbCpsdYb1R
— NCGG, Govt. of India (@NCGG_GoI) January 23, 2024
The Capacity Building Programme seeks to present India’s strides in technology, zero tolerance to corruption, and ethics in governance to the delegates in addition to the focus on land reforms.
Gambia's Deputy High Commissioner Lamin E Singhateh expressed gratitude for the knowledge-sharing collaboration between his country, India, and the NCGG. He also emphasised the importance of continuous learning for professional and personal growth in today's world.
Photo courtesy of X (@NCGG_GoI)