The Phnom Penh Post

CMAC secures US support for operations through 2025

- Voun Dara

THE US, through the Norwegian People’s Aid (NPA), on March 9 signed a cooperativ­e agreement to provide $6,355,720 in grants for the Cambodian Mine Action Centre (CMAC) to support the clearance of cluster munitions-affected areas for 45 months from March until November 2025.

The signing ceremony was presided over by CMAC director-general Heng Ratana and NPA resident representa­tive Rune Dale-Andresen at the CMAC headquarte­rs in Phnom Penh.

Ratana said the grant aimed to clear cluster munitions-affected areas in Svay Rieng, Prey Veng, Kampong Cham, Tbong Khmum, Kratie, Ratanakkir­i and Mondulkiri provinces.

He added that previously, the grant was provided annually, but through a new agreement, the project span is 45 months. The latest US support will enable CMAC to undertake this humanitari­an service using around 200 demining experts to remove cluster munitions from 13,200ha of land.

He added that the Norwegian foreign ministry had also provided an additional $89,077 for two three-month projects – the Landmine Survey and Clearance on the Cambodia-Thailand Border and the Landmine Free Provinces in Southern part of Cambodia.

Ratana said that from this year, CMAC had increased its efficiency and speed in clearing anti-personnel mine-affected areas that were recorded in the national database.

The accelerati­on of this work aimed to guarantee the safety and socio-economic developmen­t, in accordance with the government’s ambition of a mine-free Cambodia by 2025 – as agreed in the Ottawa Internatio­nal Convention, to which the Kingdom is a state party.

To that end, CMAC had enacted reforms and integrated its demining resources – including technical experts, machinery and mine-detection dogs and rats. The organisati­on’s improved operationa­l procedures meant it could mobilise its assets more efficientl­y and clear from 150 to 170sq km per year.

CMAC has received enough support and resources to carry out its work until the end of 2025 from many government­s including Japan, China and the US, and aid agencies such as the Japan Mine Action Service ( JMAS) in Cambodia, NPA and APOPO, the Belgian NGO which trains rats as mine-detectors, he said.

CMAC would continue to collaborat­e with the Cambodian Mine Action and Victim Assistance Authority to gain the support of the UN Developmen­t Programme. It also intended to carry on clearing areas of cluster munitions and UXOs, and had projected that this work would be completed by 2030.

 ?? CMAC ?? CMAC director-general Heng Ratana (right) and NPA resident representa­tive Rune Dale-Andresen at the signing ceremony on Wednesday.
CMAC CMAC director-general Heng Ratana (right) and NPA resident representa­tive Rune Dale-Andresen at the signing ceremony on Wednesday.

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