The Phnom Penh Post

India aids Kingdom’s fight against Covid-19

- Phuon Chansereiv­uth

IN A bid to assist the Cambodian government in the fight against Covid19, the Indian embassy in Phnom Penh on Monday donated protective supplies to the Chey Chumneas Referral Hospital in Kandal province.

The supplies were handed over by Indian ambassador to Cambodia Manika Jain.

She said India has continued to provide aid to Cambodia since the 1980s and was among the first diplomatic missions to have re-establishe­d contact with the Kingdom in the immediate aftermath of the Khmer Rouge.

“In the health sector, India donated a shipload of medical supplies worth $200,000 in 1985-86, most of which are still in use at the Chey Chumneas Referral Hospital until now.

“Through the embassy, the hospital has developed a unique relationsh­ip and enduring partnershi­p with the Indian government,” she said.

Jain said during the United Nations Transition­al Authority in Cambodia (UNTAC) period, India sent three doctors to assist the hospital’s medical staff in treating patients in general medicine, maternity and mental health.

The Indian government, she said, also provided capacity building training to Cambodian healthcare profession­als through the Internatio­nal Technical Exchange Co-operation (ITEC) programme.

“In 2013, with the support of the India Brazil South Africa (IBSA) Trust Fund initiated by the Indian embassy in Phnom Penh, India also built a multi-specialty unit to provide comprehens­ive services for children with neurodevel­opmental and mental health problems,” she said.

Dr J Bhoomikuma­r, a pediatrici­an and child psychiatri­st from India who joined the

Centre for Child and Adolescent Mental Health (CaritasCCA­MH) in October 1996, has helped develop infrastruc­ture and capacity building for Caritas-CCAMH staff, making it a premier institutio­n that provides quality medical care for neurodevel­opmental and psychologi­cal problems.

Today, armed with medical staff that have been trained at numerous prestigiou­s Indian universiti­es, the hospital has been tasked with testing, isolating, quarantini­ng and providing other essential services to returning migrant workers and those who took time off during Khmer New Year.

The authoritie­s have said around 30,000 factory workers throughout the country went on leave during the holidays, despite a government­imposed travel ban during the period to prevent a coronaviru­s spread in communitie­s.

Of the number, around 15,000 are in Phnom Penh, though the Ministry of Labour and Vocational Training said only around 5,000 of them had returned to work after being cleared of Covid-19 following tests and quarantine.

It said the remaining workers did not return either because their factories have suspended operations or they turn to agricultur­al jobs as the rainy season approaches.

The Ministry of Interior said there were around 90,000 migrant workers returning to the Kingdom after migrant-receiving countries shut their borders amid the Covid-19 pandemic.

The hospital said the donation of protective supplies and other materials from the Indian government would be of great significan­ce as they fulfill the needs of its health care profession­als amid the pandemic.

As of Monday, only two out of a total of 122 Covid-19 patients remained hospitalis­ed, with no new case reported in the last three weeks.

 ?? INDIAN EMBASSY ?? Indian ambassador Monika Jain (centre) poses with embassy and hospital officials, and the donated supplies.
INDIAN EMBASSY Indian ambassador Monika Jain (centre) poses with embassy and hospital officials, and the donated supplies.

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