Uninor has teamed up with the India chapter of the international NGO, Hand-in-Hand, to launch a pilot project to encourage entrepreneurship in women in the villages of India.

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Each selected woman was trained in the use of computers and given instruction in related livelihood opportunities.

A Citizen Centre was then set up for each woman entrepreneur from where she was able to conduct training sessions, offer commercial computer access and other IT related services thereby helping supplement her income.

The Uninor Hand-in-Hand Program is now working with the mWomen Programme which focuses on mobile inclusion of women and aims to halve the mobile gender gap from 300 million women to 150 million within three years. By increasing marginalized women’s access to mobile connectivity and services, the initiative aims at greater empowerment and improved quality of life.

The project was showcased today as a part of the GSMA mWomen initiative launch by Rob Conway CEO GSMA and supported by US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Cherie Blair, founder of the Cherie Blair Foundation for Women. This collaboration allows the Uninor Hand-in-Hand project to seek funding, technical assistance in running the program, assistance in developing specific products and VAS from the GSMA to support the Citizen Centres initiative.

“With women training others in their groups on these skills, this is a self propagating model that leads to the creation of many more Citizen Centres and Citizen Centre Entrepreneurs. We started with 50 centres and have already committed to setting up 500 additional centers by December. We will also take this program to other states,” said Rajiv Bawa, Executive Vice-President, Corporate Affairs, Uninor. “This project is now a part of a global goal supported by global leaders and organisations. With support from GSMA on this project, we hope to play our part in reaching this goal.”