To meet emerging data localization/privacy regulations, the government engineering agency deploys a secure, unified digital platform supporting 6,000 users nationwide.
Amid the country’s evolving data protection landscape, Bangladesh’s Local Government Engineering Department (LGED) has implemented a nationwide digital collaboration platform to modernize internal communication and ensure secure data handling.
The initiative, announced on 2 December 2025, is part of LGED’s broader effort to align infrastructure operations with national goals for digital transformation and sovereign data governance.
Overseeing more than 13,000 staff across 64 districts and nearly 500 sub-districts, LGED manages major public construction and maintenance projects, including roads, bridges, irrigation systems, and rural facilities. Its previous communication network had become fragmented and difficult to manage across geographically dispersed offices, hindering efficiency and raising data security concerns.
On-premises solution guarantees full system control
To address these challenges, LGED rolled out a centrally managed, mobile-ready platform designed to unify messaging and collaboration while ensuring full control over government information. The mixed-license model now supports 6,000 user accounts nationwide and includes features that support Bangladesh’s emerging data localization requirements under the forthcoming Personal Data Protection Ordinance 2025.
LGED’s Executive Engineer (ICT), Mohammad Zakir Hossain, noted the new platform has “made coordination between field and office teams far more seamless” while supporting the department’s cybersecurity and data privacy obligations.
According to Ivy Lee, Vice President (APJ Sales), Zimbra, the tech vendor in the project: “This deployment demonstrates how government institutions can take […] steps to strengthen data sovereignty while modernizing their communication infrastructure… [LGED retains] full jurisdictional control over its data, ensuring compliance with emerging localization mandates.”
This case study of Bangladesh’s government digital transformation highlights the critical role of data sovereignty, enforcing strict localization mandates while modernizing secure, scalable communication systems to meet evolving national regulations.



