The Phnom Penh Post

LMC gives $7M in funds to government for 19 projects

- Soth Koemsoeun

THE Cambodian government on Thursday received $7.66 million from the Lancang-Mekong Cooperatio­n (LMC) Special Fund 2018 to implement 19 projects. Initiated by the Chinese government during the first LMC Leaders’ meeting in China’s Hainan province in March 2016, the LMC Special Fund aims to support small- and medium-sized projects put forward by the six Lancang-Mekong countries – China, Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam.

The fund was provided in a signing ceremony attended by Cambodian Minister of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Prak Sokhonn and Chinese Ambassador to Cambodia Wang Wentian.

“Since the launch of the LMC, Cambodia has received a total of 35 projects covering a broad scope of cooperatio­n activities in the field of agricultur­e, tourism, ICT, education and research, water resources, rural developmen­t, air connectivi­ty cultural and religious exchanges.

“Several of them were completed and the remaining are near completion or have made substantia­l progress,” said Sokhonn.

He said that although the fund does not cover mega-infrastruc­ture projects, their impact for the sub-region is significan­t.

“To me, the other true value of these small projects is that they can produce tangible results that touch the lives of the people and contribute to improving their well-being,” he said.

Sok honn cited a 2017 LMC-funded project that enabled 25 Cambodian students from Kandal province to study telecommun­ication and engineerin­g at the Tianjin Sino-German University of Applied Sciences.

“For students coming from rural areas, these are their dream scholarshi­ps, which will most likely enable them to secure their dream jobs after graduation,” he said.

Wang told reporters after the ceremony that the Kingdom had received more LMCfunded projects than any other LancangMek­ong nations for two years in a row – 16 projects in 2017 and 19 last year.

“We firmly believe that the successful implementa­tion of these projects would bring huge benefits to the Cambodian people and improve their livelihood­s in many areas,” he said.

While welcoming the latest grant, Kin Phea, director-general of the Internatio­nal Relations Institute at the Royal Academy of Cambodia, said China also stands to gain substantia­lly from the LMC Special Fund initiative.

“In [internatio­nal] cooperatio­n, it is normal that some [countries] benefit more while some benefit less. They cannot blame China. Essentiall­y, as a member, Cambodia should improve its capability, intelligen­ce, strength and leadership in order to benefit even more,” he said.

The latest 19 projects include, among others, scholarshi­p programmes, project management training, poverty reduction via rural economic developmen­t and integratio­n developmen­t along the Mekong River.

It also includes Inter-religion dialogue on peace and sustainabl­e developmen­t and capacity building via Mekong-Lancang Cooperatio­n for the digital economy.

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? Chinese Ambassador to Cambodia Wang Wentian (sitting, left) and Cambodian Minister of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Prak Sokhonn (sitting, right).
SUPPLIED Chinese Ambassador to Cambodia Wang Wentian (sitting, left) and Cambodian Minister of Foreign Affairs and Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Prak Sokhonn (sitting, right).

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia