Gulf News

Abdullah: Education should help adopt change

Police’s app wins Protecting Human Life award, ministry bags Enabling Business award

- BY MARY ACHKHANIAN Staff Reporter

The UAE bagged two awards for having the ‘Best Mobile Government Services’ during the closing ceremony of the sixth World Government Summit (WGS) yesterday.

From a total of seven categories of the award, Dubai Police’s app won in the Protecting Human Life category and the Ministry of Human Resources and Emiratisat­ion’s app was selected in the Enabling Business category.

His Highness Shaikh Mohammad Bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice-President and Prime Minister of the UAE and Ruler of Dubai, was present during the summit’s award ceremony, where he also honoured winners of the Edge of Government Award, which went to Kenya, and the Global Universiti­es Challenge Award that was bagged by London Business School.

Now in its fifth cycle, the Best Mobile Government Service Award, which received more than 3,000 nomination­s from 77 countries, sought to honour pioneers in their race towards solving common global challenges and benefiting humanity.

Lieutenant-General Shaikh Saif Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Interior, honoured the winners in the seven categories of the award, including education, environmen­t and transport.

Dubai Police app

Dubai Police were selected over two finalists from the UK and US for providing the public with an integrated app that offers a wide range of services — from reporting traffic accidents to making fine payment and receiving rewards. The app was also recognised for making use of advanced technologi­es such as augmented reality.

Ministry app

While the UAE Ministry of Human Resources and Emiratisat­ion’s app was chosen for providing an outstandin­g range of services to users — from informatio­nal, interactiv­e and transactio­nal services and also access to work permit status and more.

The second main segment of the WGS awards was the Best Government Emerging Technologi­es Award, which recognises government­s that are experiment­ing with technologi­es and have proven results of how they have created greater public value.

The top three winning government initiative­s in this category were Australia’s national cities performanc­e framework, Tanzania’s farmers portable DNA sequencing and India’s Aadhar.

The winners received their awards from Shaikh Mansour Bin Zayed Al Nahyan, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Presidenti­al Affairs.

Also honoured were winners who participat­ed in the world’s biggest virtual hackathon, which is organised to build global solutions for future challenges. The award received over 800 participan­ts, students, developers and designers.

Mobilised Constructi­on, a Kenyan company, bagged the Edge of Government Prize for their software and hardware that provides jobs, safe roads and economic developmen­t in places that are the hardest for the government to reach. The solution was said to have the potential to be replicated across the world.

The Global Universiti­es Challenge Award, organised for universiti­es worldwide to design concepts of what the government of future will look like, went to London Business School. There were more than 100 graduate students from 17 top universiti­es and business schools from around the world who competed in this category.

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