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Nearly 20M women are digitally literate in India under PMGDISHA: Smriti Irani

Pradhan Mantri Gramin Digital Saksharta Abhiyan (PMGDISHA) aims to empower people in rural areas by training them to operate computers or smartphones and send and receive e-mails, browse the internet, access government services, and undertake digital payment.

Nearly 20M women are digitally literate in India under PMGDISHA: Smriti Irani

Wednesday April 27, 2022 , 2 min Read

Nearly 20 million women are certified to be digitally literate in India under the PMGDISHA programme dedicated to digital literacy, Union Minister Smriti Irani said on Wednesday.


Pradhan Mantri Gramin Digital Saksharta Abhiyan (PMGDISHA) aims to empower people in rural areas by training them to operate computers or digital access devices like tablets, smartphones, etc., send and receive e-mails, browse the internet, access government services, and undertake digital payment, among others.


Responding to a question at an interactive session at the Raisina Dialogue — India's premier foreign policy and geo-economics conference — Irani said there is much being done in India digitally and otherwise.


She said the PMGDISHA programme has close to 20 million certified digitally literate women in India.

"When India went into lockdown, we did not have a single PPE suit in the country, and the workforce that made those PPE suit, about 75 percent of it were Indian women, and in just three months, we became the second-largest exporters in the world, and that is an indicator of female potential in Indian manufacturing," she said.

"We have 6.6 million women who are first responders in the COVID-19 pandemic — be it doctors, nurses, ASHA workers, and Anganwadi workers," the women and child development minister added.


She said under Ayushman Bharat, the footfall of women in hospitals and healthcare establishments in last two years has been 450 million, and women who are getting themselves checked for cancer, including cervical cancer is 70 million.


"When you have a government, which ensures their needs are financially supported, they do not withdraw from these services," she said.


Responding to a question on what role can a male and a female leader play in ensuring gender justice, Irani said, "A male leader takes you where you want to be, and a female leader possibly takes you where you ought to be. But a male leader who gives the promise of gender justice ensures that you reach commutatively as a society at a position where women do not have to struggle to be an equal partner in developing your country culturally, financially, and becoming a global voice as one."


On the pandemic's impact on India, she said the prime minister ensured that gender needs are at the centre of policy.


Edited by Suman Singh