'International Conference on Digital Crime' from Thursday
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The 'International Conference on Digital Crime' is going to be organized in Nepal. Thirteen countries will participate in the conference to be organized by the Attorney General's office in Kathmandu.
According to the information given by the Attorney General's Office on Tuesday, an international conference is going to be organized with the aim of promoting international cooperation in digital crime control, investigation, prosecution and judicial process. The conference will be held in Kathmandu on Thursday and Friday.
Attorney General Ramesh Badal said that he is going to organize a conference to set a roadmap for legal, policy and institutional reforms by sharing international experience to make digital crime investigation, prosecution and judicial process effective. With the rapid development of
technology, the crimes committed through the misuse of digital technology are increasing and different types of criminals are becoming interrelated and organized. In the
conference, more than 90 government lawyers, legal experts, judges and high-ranking officials from 13 countries including Nepal, Britain, Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Maldives, South Korea, Azerbaijan, India, China, Sri Lanka, Norway and Russia will participate.
On behalf of Nepal, the Supreme Court, Nepal Rastra Bank, various ministries, government lawyers and officials from other agencies will participate.
The conference inaugurated by Prime Minister KP Sharma Oli will be concluded by Home Minister Ramesh Akhtar. At the
conference, various dimensions of crimes committed through digital technology and effective methods of investigation, prosecution and judicial resolution will be discussed in depth. The Attorney General's Office has informed that papers will be presented on issues such as sexual violence through technology, cyber crime, digital fraud and financial crime, international legal cooperation and cyber legal policy making.
The crime committed through the use of digital technology is becoming more complicated day by day and the tendency of criminals to challenge the laws and judicial boundaries of different countries through technology is increasing, so international law is indispensable for controlling cross-border crime, the Attorney General's Office says.
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