Saturday, December 27, 2025
ADVT 
International

India's Abdulqadir Rashik Wins Top Prize At UN Challenge For Open Source Tool

Darpan News Desk IANS, 13 Apr, 2017 01:47 PM
    An Indian software engineer has won the top prize at a global challenge for an open-source tool that enables users to interactively view UN General Assembly resolutions and gain a deeper understanding of the voting patterns of member states.
     
    Abdulqadir Rashik, also an entrepreneur, won the ‘Unite Ideas #UNGAViz Textual Analysis and Visualisation Challenge’ for his ‘Global Policy’, an open-source tool that enables users to search and interactively view General Assembly resolutions to gain a deeper understanding of the voting patterns and decisions made by United Nations Member States.
     
    Rashik’s prototype will be made public and shared with United Nations bodies and member states. He will also receive recognition from the Department of State and the Office of Information and Communications Technology.
     
    Rashik is a frequent contributor to Unite Ideas challenges and he previously won the top prize in the #LinksSDGs challenge for his ‘Links to Sustainable Cities’, an interactive visualisation that identifies and maps the links between various Sustainable Development Goals.
     
    The world body said the project was the first collaboration between the UN Office of Information and Communications Technology (OICT) and the US Department of State.
     
    The UNGAViz challenged developers worldwide to create an open-source tool capable of providing greater visibility into Member State voting patterns, as well as greater public transparency about their voting choices. Solutions were judged not only on their technical merits, but also on their potential to support policymakers dealing with humanitarian challenges, peace and security issues, and other international matters, sometimes under extreme time pressure.
     
    A State Department official, Andrew Hyde, said the UN General Assembly had drafted and passed thousands of resolutions affecting people in every corner of the world since its establishment in 1946.
     
    “In support of transparency and accountability, we believe that everybody, from the general public to policymakers to diplomats, should have easy and timely access to this vast body of knowledge,” he said.
     
    The first runner-up position was awarded to Maximiliano Lopez, an information technology consultant from Argentina, and the second runner-up was Thomas Fournaise, an information technology manager from France.
     
    The Chief of the Global Services Division in the Office of Information and Communications Technology Salem Avan said the global network of talented open-source developers responded with insightful and practical solutions that can be easily implemented and made available to United Nations offices and Member States.
     
    UNGAViz is the sixth challenge issued by Unite Ideas, a big data crowd-sourcing platform developed by the Office of Information and Communications Technology to facilitate collaboration among academia, civil society and UN offices, and to mobilise data scientists and software developers around the world to help tackle the complex issues faced by the Organisation and its member states through the creation of open-source technology solutions.
     
    To date, academia, the general public and private companies have responded to the Unite Ideas challenges with more than 50 open-source solutions, many of which will be used by the United Nations or shared with member states.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Muslim Taxi Driver Beaten By Drunk Woman, Accomplice In UK

    Muslim Taxi Driver Beaten By Drunk Woman, Accomplice In UK
    A Muslim taxi driver in the UK was thrashed and punched by a drunk woman and her accomplice with a passerby filming the "horrific incident" and uploading it on social media, media reports said.

    Muslim Taxi Driver Beaten By Drunk Woman, Accomplice In UK

    ISIS Plotting Chemical Attack On UK Says A British Minister: Report

    ISIS is plotting mass casualty chemical attacks against Britain, a senior UK minister has warned. Minister in charge of security Ben Wallace said ISIS had used chemical weapons in Syria and Iraq and intelligence chiefs believe it has an "aspiration" to use them in Britain.

    ISIS Plotting Chemical Attack On UK Says A British Minister: Report

    Saskatchewan Has A Problem With Drunk Driving; New Law Aims To Change Culture

    Saskatchewan Has A Problem With Drunk Driving; New Law Aims To Change Culture
    Allan Kerpan's 25-year-old daughter, Danille, was killed on the Thanksgiving weekend in 2014 when a truck going the wrong way collided with her vehicle on Highway 11 near Bladworth, between Regina and Saskatoon.

    Saskatchewan Has A Problem With Drunk Driving; New Law Aims To Change Culture

    World's Highest Bridge Opens In China, Cost $144 Million

    World's Highest Bridge Opens In China, Cost $144 Million
    The world's highest bridge has opened to traffic in China, connecting two provinces in the mountainous southwest and reducing travel times by as much as three-quarters, local authorities said on Friday.

    World's Highest Bridge Opens In China, Cost $144 Million

    Toronto Sisters Jyoti And Kiran Matheroo Arrested In Nigeria Over Sex Extortion Scandal

    Toronto Sisters Jyoti And Kiran Matheroo Arrested In Nigeria Over Sex Extortion Scandal
    Jyoti and Kiran Matharoo are accused of attempting to extort money from wealthy Nigerian men.

    Toronto Sisters Jyoti And Kiran Matheroo Arrested In Nigeria Over Sex Extortion Scandal

    NYPD Finally Allows Sikh Officers To Wear Turbans And Grow Beard To Half-Inch

    NYPD Finally Allows Sikh Officers To Wear Turbans And Grow Beard To Half-Inch
    City Police Commissioner James O'Neill said: "We want to make the NYPD as diverse as possible."

    NYPD Finally Allows Sikh Officers To Wear Turbans And Grow Beard To Half-Inch