NGOs to be involved in India’s 2011 census
By IANSSaturday, February 20, 2010
AGARTALA - For the first time in India, non-government organisations (NGOs) will be involved in carrying out the country’s gigantic 2011 census operation, officials said here Saturday.
“Besides senior officials, renowned personalities from among the NGOs have been selected as national trainers in each state to provide training to other officials to conduct the enumeration of the census,” senior census official Dilip Acherjee told reporters.
He said: “In the first phase of census 2011, data collection for creation of the first ever computerised National Register of Indian Citizens (NRIC), along with house listing and housing census would be taken up April 26 this year.”
The 45-day work would be completed June 9 tentatively though the dates are likely to vary from state to state.
Ahead of the first phase of census, central Home Minister P. Chidambaram would hold a meeting with district magistrates and census officials across the country March 4 in New Delhi to finalise the road map on creation of NRIC.
“The coastal states of India have already begun the work on NRIC,” the official added.
“These very critical and basic statistics of the NRIC would form the database of every Indian and these would be maintained by the Unique Identification of India (UID), a proposed system to be used as a means of uniquely identifying the residents in the country.”
Acherjee said that the actual population enumeration would be undertaken simultaneously across the country from Feb 9 to Feb 28, 2011 followed by a five-day revision round from March 1-5, 2011.
The preliminary census result would be declared March 25, 2011.
To conduct the census operation, several thousand enumerators, supervisors and census officers will be appointed across the country soon.
District magistrates and collectors would be principal census officers (PCO) of the concerned district while sub-divisional magistrates and block development officers would be the sub-divisional census officers and charge census officers respectively.
“The Indian census has a rich tradition and enjoys the reputation of being one of the best in the world. The first census in India was conducted in 1872 with a diverse schedule and separately in different regions. In 1981, a census was taken for the entire country simultaneously.”
Acherjee said: “The 2011 census would be the 15th census since 1872 and the seventh census after India’s independence.”
For the first time, the United Nations Children’s Fund (Unicef) and United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) would also help to create master trainers, who would educate the enumerators and supervisors to conducted the massive census operation.