Bengal Govt elevates IPS Ajay Mukund Ranade to DGP (Law and Order)
In a bold bid, Nabanna has rolled out a mandate: geo-tagging is now compulsory for all government projects. All construction site update, embedding invisible digital fingerprints of location, time, and date into photos and videos should be uploaded to the official portal. This isn't just a tech tweak; it's a seismic shift in oversight, building on the two-year-old Unified Project Management System (UPMS) that's already tracking real-time progress. The Finance Department issues notification signaling zero tolerance for the ghost projects that have long haunted state coffers, where funds vanish into thin air without a brick laid.
With departments now compelled to tag every visual proof, Nabanna's monitors can pinpoint delays faster demanding answers and clawing back unspent budgets if the pace lags.The genius here lies in its simplicity—geo-tagging auto-stamps media with GPS coordinates, turning potential fudges into foolproof evidence that matches the ground truth against online claims. While UPMS has democratized data entry across all 20-plus departments, verifying authenticity was a manual maze prone to slip-ups.
A leaner system where accountability isn't an afterthought but the default, potentially freeing up crores in idle funds for real needs amid Bengal's push for self-reliant growth. As this digital dragnet tightens, the corridors of Nabanna envision a ripple effect: fewer scandals, swifter completions, and a blueprint for other states eyeing similar reforms. The government's bet is on empowerment—equipping field teams with smartphones to snap and tag on the fly. In the end, this isn't mere surveillance; it's a promise to the taxpayer that every paisa pulses with purpose, transforming West Bengal's development machine from opaque to unmissable.