The Phnom Penh Post

Childcare services set to resume

- Niem Chheng

THE Ministry of Social Affairs, Veterans and Youth Rehabilita­tion will allow associatio­ns and local and internatio­nal NGOs to resume the provision of childcare services after it was suspended since April to prevent the spread of Covid-19.

In a directive seen by The Post on Monday, it said the organisati­ons can now resume the services as long as they follow safety and preventive measures recommende­d by the Ministry of Health.

It said the decision was made after the government demonstrat­ed “success” in its response to the pandemic. However, visitors are barred from any of the centres until further notice.

“Donors, foreign volunteers and generous people who wish to visit the children at the centres or in the community must refrain from doing so to avoid the spread of Covid-19,” it said.

Preventive measures detailed in the directive are divided into two parts – one for the organisati­ons and the other for caretakers.

For the organisati­ons, the number of vulnerable children and child victims who will receive training at each centre cannot exceed 10. Social distancing must be maintained at all time, the directive said.

Associatio­ns and NGOs must prepare soap, sanitisers, hand-washing basins and thermomete­rs, and continue to educate the children on the importance of handwashin­g and other preventive measures.

Directors, programme managers, social workers, childcare service staff, and children under their care must learn and practice safety measures introduced by the health ministry.

They must monitor the health of children and immediatel­y report any suspicious Covid-19-related symptoms to caretakers, local authoritie­s, health officials and the social affairs department.

Caretakers must continue to look after children at home or the centre, and avoid going to high-risk places such as recreation centres or kindergart­ens. They are required to follow strict hygiene practices to protect themselves against Covid-19 and from transmitti­ng it to others.

Social Affairs ministry spokespers­on Touch Channy told The Post on Monday that childcare centres are divided into two types – centres where children lived permanentl­y and those where they go for training and return home after class.

“Previously, we imposed restrictio­ns on the centres by not allowing children to leave or enter them, which means they stay there permanentl­y. Visitors were also banned from visiting them.

“During the Khmer New Year, we banned children from leaving the centres because we were afraid that they could contract the virus.

“Now that the situation has improved, we’ve loosened the measures a little. So we allow community centres to reopen and require them to follow safety and other preventive measures,” he said.

Channy said there are currently 223 childcare centres across the Kingdom, where 6,597 children are enrolled. Most of the centres provide life skills training. Foreign language classes are managed by Cambodians, he said.

 ?? SOCIAL AFFAIRS MINISTRY ?? Children at the Kolab IV Orphanage in Phnom Penh.
SOCIAL AFFAIRS MINISTRY Children at the Kolab IV Orphanage in Phnom Penh.

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