TCS, Wipro, to bid for $408 Million FIR project
By
siliconindia news bureau
| Sunday,06 December 2009, 18:01 hrs
|
New Delhi: Around 12 companies, including TCS, Infosys and Wipro will bid for a $408 million online FIR project, which will involve devising a new automated complaint filing and tracking system that the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) plans to roll out across India.
Vijay Kumar Singh hopes that by 2012, most of those he gets to see in person would be potential criminals. Singh hopes to be a cop. And those whom he intends to spare from his appointment diary are the general public. Singh's hopes are pinned on the new automated system that MHA plans to roll out across India, aimed at trimming the time the general public spends in doing the labyrinthine rounds of the good old police station, reports Economic Times.

At the Greater Kailash-1 police station in South Delhi, where Singh is the station house officer, the existing Zipnet search is pretty much an ornament. The system tracks from a set base of data, often outdated, and fails to read the latest inputs from other law enforcement agencies.
The new integrated system, that police officers like Singh are looking forward to, will network initially 14,000 police stations across the country, and all the 6,000 higher offices in police hierarchy (like headquarters, range offices, zonal offices). It will bring the benefits of India technology prowess to this British era institution, hopes Singh.
The MHA contract pegged at Rs. 2,000 crore will come up for bidding on Tuesday. Around 12 companies, including TCS, Infosys, Wipro, IBM and Accenture, would be participating to devise the system, slugged CCTNS-Crime and Criminal Tracking Network and Systems. "Our work will get easier as systems get integrated. Theft and missing cases will be easily solved," says Singh who has already worked at the Delhi Police HQ, which has an existing provision to receive emailed complaints. For citizens, the system means online filing of complaints about stolen property, missing persons or even submitting anonymous intelligence and crime alerts.
All criminal complaints in the country will be allotted a number that can be used to access periodical status reports. The system will also offer details of unsolved cases, missing persons and stolen property besides allowing the general public to lodge complaints if they are not happy with the investigating officer. Already, TCS has done the IT implementation for Gujarat cops while Wipro has done it for Karnataka. But those systems don't talk to each other, which the CCTNS seeks to cure.
Home minister P Chidambaram wants it to be operational by 2012. Nirmaljeet Singh Kalsi, Punjab's former IT secretary, is assisting the minister in this in his capacity as MHA joint secretary. Kalsi was unavailable for comment on this story. "States will request for different bids, and technologies. The challenge will be integration," says an official working on the project requesting anonymity since he is not authorized to speak about CCTNS. Wipro's e-governance Head Ranbir Singh says a key hurdle in the path of integration will be the language factor. FIRs are normally filed in local languages, and integrating tens of languages into one electronic dossier could prove a data entry nightmare.
Vijay Kumar Singh hopes that by 2012, most of those he gets to see in person would be potential criminals. Singh hopes to be a cop. And those whom he intends to spare from his appointment diary are the general public. Singh's hopes are pinned on the new automated system that MHA plans to roll out across India, aimed at trimming the time the general public spends in doing the labyrinthine rounds of the good old police station, reports Economic Times.

At the Greater Kailash-1 police station in South Delhi, where Singh is the station house officer, the existing Zipnet search is pretty much an ornament. The system tracks from a set base of data, often outdated, and fails to read the latest inputs from other law enforcement agencies.
The new integrated system, that police officers like Singh are looking forward to, will network initially 14,000 police stations across the country, and all the 6,000 higher offices in police hierarchy (like headquarters, range offices, zonal offices). It will bring the benefits of India technology prowess to this British era institution, hopes Singh.
The MHA contract pegged at Rs. 2,000 crore will come up for bidding on Tuesday. Around 12 companies, including TCS, Infosys, Wipro, IBM and Accenture, would be participating to devise the system, slugged CCTNS-Crime and Criminal Tracking Network and Systems. "Our work will get easier as systems get integrated. Theft and missing cases will be easily solved," says Singh who has already worked at the Delhi Police HQ, which has an existing provision to receive emailed complaints. For citizens, the system means online filing of complaints about stolen property, missing persons or even submitting anonymous intelligence and crime alerts.
All criminal complaints in the country will be allotted a number that can be used to access periodical status reports. The system will also offer details of unsolved cases, missing persons and stolen property besides allowing the general public to lodge complaints if they are not happy with the investigating officer. Already, TCS has done the IT implementation for Gujarat cops while Wipro has done it for Karnataka. But those systems don't talk to each other, which the CCTNS seeks to cure.
Home minister P Chidambaram wants it to be operational by 2012. Nirmaljeet Singh Kalsi, Punjab's former IT secretary, is assisting the minister in this in his capacity as MHA joint secretary. Kalsi was unavailable for comment on this story. "States will request for different bids, and technologies. The challenge will be integration," says an official working on the project requesting anonymity since he is not authorized to speak about CCTNS. Wipro's e-governance Head Ranbir Singh says a key hurdle in the path of integration will be the language factor. FIRs are normally filed in local languages, and integrating tens of languages into one electronic dossier could prove a data entry nightmare.
Reader's comments (16)
1: spaghetti. There will be more complaints than
the slow police dept can handle.
Posted by: Amar - 07 Dec, 2009
2: Good approach by the government but its not
really an innovation. NIBRS is one such
system which was introduced way back in US. I
have worked over the same for a long time and
it has immense possibilities in improving the
efficiency of services by the law medical and
other institutions of the country. It can be
made a single coherent system for complete
cyber management
Posted by: Sumit Raut - 07 Dec, 2009
3: I have a solution for this exactly and the
architecture has been my life work for this!
I can have it ready in weeks to months! Yes
multi-language!
Posted by: Hemant Kumar Setya - 07 Dec, 2009
4: This is some what similar to Passport project
only, I believe all of us are really
frustrated. Really really frustrated of the
actions which any of the government takes. 1.
They will always give the project for the
MNC's because they can make more bugs than
any one else can. 2. They will charge 1000%
extra than any other companies will charge.
Why government doesnt take any initiative to
make a forum of small companies to do the
same job, even in the MNC's only humans are
doing. But the difference is the profit they
make out of these projects will be very huge
and atleast 50% of their profit will go as
bribes. This is the reason why i even think
twice to vote. there is no point in making
the rich people richer. It is always better
to channel these projects to group /
consortium of small companies and let them
grow. This is what any other nation will do.
In US they support the startups like hell,
with 1000s of benefits for business, but here
even if you want to register a company you
need to bribe the officers for getting it
incorporated within 2/3 weeks. Singapore if
you want to incorporate a company, it will be
done in a day, there is no other fuss. In
india, if you want to register a company, you
need to wait... just wait... you need to fill
the tax reimbursement, these big IT companies
would have bagged those projects also
previously and they have made such a system
that no common man can understand, fill an
excel, export to xml - > upload the xml -
what a pathetic system when the world is
going into web 2.0 and latest security
mesures. Please if there is some one who is
interested for such a thing i request you ,
please lets make a consortium for startups
and lets compete with the BIG MNC's who is
just eating for nothing and who is making the
whole system a big crap.
Posted by: Independent Thinker - 07 Dec, 2009

5:Keep cribbing and nurse your prejudices and
perceptions!
Ankit Srivastava replied to: Independent Thinker
post - 07 Dec, 2009
post - 07 Dec, 2009
6: Wonderful and much needed project since the
criminals these days don't restrict
themselves to one city/town or state.
Yes, FIRs being in local language can be the biggest challenge, but they still have to be in the local language and we cannot change them. What runs in my mind is, just to feed the Section Numbers under which the complaints have been lodged. This would make it easy and when more details are required then the relevant FIR's can be translated.
Yes, FIRs being in local language can be the biggest challenge, but they still have to be in the local language and we cannot change them. What runs in my mind is, just to feed the Section Numbers under which the complaints have been lodged. This would make it easy and when more details are required then the relevant FIR's can be translated.
Posted by: Prakash - 07 Dec, 2009
7: this certainly is a very good thought put
ready to be acted on and really is a tough
job of collaboration of the Technology to the
ordinary Indian. as of my openion it would
have been better to facillitate an ordinary
indian to log the complaints online. They are
really concerned for more crime and more
complaints ? huh weared . why not invest 2000
crores to minimise the crime and the
criminals thus reducing the complaints by
2012?
government , let them governt .i m sorry i have only one VOTE..
Rajeev Prajapati
government , let them governt .i m sorry i have only one VOTE..
Rajeev Prajapati
Posted by: Rajeev Prajapati - 06 Dec, 2009
8: This is one great FMS project!
I encourage this kind of projects which are more useful to the public. If some one feels that this is bogus, at first we must question ourselves. If we on suspecting, no progress will come. The root for the corruption was developed by us only.
Let us be sincere and stay away from bribing (Charity Trust fund)to capture something. Let us trust more than suspicious for bright growth.
I encourage this kind of projects which are more useful to the public. If some one feels that this is bogus, at first we must question ourselves. If we on suspecting, no progress will come. The root for the corruption was developed by us only.
Let us be sincere and stay away from bribing (Charity Trust fund)to capture something. Let us trust more than suspicious for bright growth.
Posted by: CJC Chakravarthy - 06 Dec, 2009
9: there will be even hundred thousand projects
like this coming up in the next 2 years..
this is for the govt. to show that they are
doing something.
The best example would be the passport project handled by TCS, which is the biggest example of a large scale corruption and of fooling the people.
The best example would be the passport project handled by TCS, which is the biggest example of a large scale corruption and of fooling the people.
Posted by: sujith - 06 Dec, 2009

10:These projects should be given to American
companies instead of Indian IT firms. Only
then it will boost the economy. TCS will take
the 2000 crore and then pay only .5 crore to
its employees to finish the project. Cheap
buggers.
Indian replied to: sujith
post - 06 Dec, 2009
post - 06 Dec, 2009

11: Please mind your language when u talk about
TCS. It is the largest organisation providing
a lot of employment.
Surya teja replied to: Indian
post - 07 Dec, 2009
post - 07 Dec, 2009

12: Rubbish what u r talking about to Boost the
the Indian economy or US economy ...We are
not in position to outsource work ,remember
we are still many years back from US and
still 1$ = 40 INR...
Avijit replied to: Indian
post - 07 Dec, 2009
post - 07 Dec, 2009

13: i think we should learn from CAT exam develop
from US firm..and what u talk about if we
give this project TO US it finally come to us
only and they also do the same then why not
Indian....and you talking about boost we also
need that ....so many people are looking for
job in INDIA too...
Deeno replied to: Indian
post - 06 Dec, 2009
post - 06 Dec, 2009

14: When we work on some project, cost of
Manpower should be managed within 30 - 25%
.
If we spend 90% to Manpower, what felicity can a client provide.
If we spend 90% to Manpower, what felicity can a client provide.
CJC Chakravarthy replied to: Indian
post - 06 Dec, 2009
post - 06 Dec, 2009
15: This system will ease the FIR process and
will also reduce the corruption in current
system.Good initiative by government.
Posted by: Sourabh - 06 Dec, 2009

16:But I think it will be a real tough task for
top cops to implement it at bottom level.hw
it will crack on the 7th most corrupt
dept.........god knws hw india works
rajesh vishnoi replied to: Sourabh
post - 07 Dec, 2009
post - 07 Dec, 2009
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