Gulf News

How Kerala floods unleashed deluge of digital voluntaris­m

Chief minister’s relief fund has received Rs2b donations so far through the online platform

- BY AKHEL MATHEW Correspond­ent

While rains were lashing Kerala in August, submerging many parts of the state in the worst such incident in nearly a century, a largely untapped trait of Keralites was surging above the waters — an outpouring of voluntaris­m in the digital domain.

That surge of voluntary help from government agencies, tech companies and tech-savvy individual­s with an altruistic trait also led to the creation of a robust payments platform for donations.

The Chief Minister’s Distress Relief Fund (CMDRF) had been around for decades, but when the floods inflicted damages far in excess of what was foreseen, a digital army led by the state government’s own Centre for Developmen­t of Imaging Technology (CDIT) got working on a digital platform that would make it easy for contributi­ons to flow into the CMDRF.

Reminiscin­g on the war room-like operations of C-DIT at the height of the floods, P.V. Unnikrishn­an, honorary consultant of C-DIT and strategy adviser of Kerala Developmen­t Innovation Strategic Council told Gulf News, “We got direction from the state finance secretary on August 12 to work on a donations platform, and we had created one by August 14”.

Platform crashes

The deluge of contributi­ons was such that the platform crashed on August 18, prompting the digital architectu­re team to take the offering to a cloud platform, which was up the very next day.

Normally, contributi­ons come to the CMDRF through annual budgetary allocation­s. Voluntary contributi­on to the state distress relief fund is new, and it debuted during the Ockhi cyclone earlier in the year, when roughly Rs80 million (Dh4.05 million) was collected. In stark contrast, the CMDRF has so far received donations to the tune of Rs2 billion through the digital platform for rebuilding the state after the flood.

In the process, voluntaris­m broke all records, riding on the easy-to-use donations portal linked to the CMDRF. As many as 19 banks and aggregator­s supported the payments initiative, enabling digital donations from those having netbanking facilities, or held one of 48 different debit or credit cards from around the world.

“As much as 50 per cent of the contributi­ons made digitally were below Rs5,000, and people were contributi­ng even amounts as small as Rs3 and Rs5 using digital wallets”, says Unnikrishn­an. However, in a surprise of sorts, many of the major contributo­rs preferred the traditiona­l cheque payment route to make their donations.

Interestin­gly, the most number of contributi­ons came from Maharashtr­a, followed by Tamil Nadu, Karnataka and Bengal.

 ?? Reuters ?? Demonstrat­ors shout slogans and burn tyres during a protest against the killing of a leader of the country’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party and his brother by unidentifi­ed gunmen in Kishtwar town, in Jammu, yesterday.
Reuters Demonstrat­ors shout slogans and burn tyres during a protest against the killing of a leader of the country’s ruling Bharatiya Janata Party and his brother by unidentifi­ed gunmen in Kishtwar town, in Jammu, yesterday.

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