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Cambodia

35 years after it was founded in the Cambodian refugee camps in Thailand, HI continues to support the most vulnerable Cambodians, including thousands of survivors of mines and explosive remnants of war.

Cambodia - HI

Channa, 7 Years old, has a congenital amputation and is a beneficiary of HI | ©Lucas Veuve/HI

Our actions

HI’s work in Cambodia aims to reduce the onset of different types of disability, to improve access to quality health and rehabilitation services for people with disabilities, and to promote their social and economic independence.

Since 1979, more than 64,000 victims of mines and explosive remnants of war have been officially recorded,  but the real figures are still unknown. Many of the survivors have disabilities and living conditions are not easy. As early as 1987 HI set up seven rehabilitation centres in the country to provide them with rehabilitation care and to fit them with prostheses. Today, the organisation continues to support provincial rehabilitation centres in Kampong Cham and Tbong Khmum to ensure they provide quality services and to ensure the sustainability of the sector. To this end, the organisation is training staff and improving the centres’ management systems. In Kampong Cham, more than 2,000 people with disabilities receive adapted assistive devices every year.

HI also deploys vital projects to fight against mines, sub-munitions (cluster bombs) and explosive remnants of war in Cambodia.

In 1992, the organisation was alarmed by the resurgence of mine accidents when around 375,000 Cambodian refugees returned to their homes. Disgusted by the lack of response, HI trained Cambodian deminers, cleared contaminated land, and made villagers aware of the dangers of mines and explosive remnants of war. Between 1993 and 2011, HI and the CMAC (Cambodian Mine Action Centre) demined 330 km² of land, representing two-thirds of the total surface area cleared in the country.

HI's programme notably focuses on access to rehabilitation care and orthopaedic fitting, and the detection of disabilities in very young children. The organisation is also working to promote the professional inclusion of people with disabilities, so as to reduce poverty and social exclusion in a sustainable way. Finally, HI is helping to limit the onset of disabilities by improving mother and child health care and road safety.

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OpenTeleRehab: customised remote rehabilitation services
© HI 2024
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OpenTeleRehab: customised remote rehabilitation services

HI's telerehabilitation software was first rolled out in Cambodia in May 2022. Here is some feedback from two families who have been using the customised service it provides.
Srey Neang: a prosthesis so she can return to school
© Stephen Rae / HI
Health Rehabilitation

Srey Neang: a prosthesis so she can return to school

Srey Neang's leg was amputated after she was injured by an explosive device at the age of four.

Mother and daughter: both walking again thanks to HI!
© Sophea Song / HI
Rehabilitation

Mother and daughter: both walking again thanks to HI!

After a road accident, Vuth Ta and her mother Tum Thab were both amputated. They have been treated for four years at the HI rehabilitation center in Kampong Cham province.

Background

Map of HI's interventions in Cambodia

Infamous for its tragic history, Cambodia is considered to be one of the countries with the largest number of mines in the world. It is also one of the poorest. Thanks to a period of relative stability, the country is re-launching its economic development.

Cambodia has been at peace since 1998 but remains marked by the legacy of almost 40 years of war and is still largely dependent on international aid. Nevertheless, the country is changing.
Since 1998 there has been a period of relative political stability and the country has benefited, although to a limited extent, from the region's economic miracle. A real, if fragile, development dynamic has seen living conditions improve for an increasing number of inhabitants. The population now has almost permanent access to electricity in large towns and increasingly in rural areas as well. Private and public building work is increasing. The vast majority of children go to school, and maternal and child mortality rates have dropped significantly.

Nevertheless, there is still much poverty and inequality. There is continued corruption and impunity for the richest members of society and numerous problems remain unresolved. The still-fragile economy generates little public revenue, which explains the continued weaknesses in the health and education systems.

The causes of disability are numerous and include disease, mine accidents, and very commonly road accidents, as poor road safety is a major problem in Cambodia. People with disabilities, particularly children, constitute one of the most vulnerable groups in Cambodian society. Support for people with disabilities is not seen to be a priority by the Government, so international organisations remain the front line actors in the disability and rehabilitation sectors.

The problem of anti-personnel mines, laid down in massive numbers over a period of almost 15 years, hinders the development of a country in which 80% of the population live in rural areas. It is estimated that there are several million mines in the country. Cambodia is considered to be one of the most heavily mine-polluted countries in the world, but is also the victim of another curse: sub-munitions. During the Vietnam war (1955-1975), the United States released over 26 million of these weapons over the country. These bombardments have left up to 5.8 million unexploded devices on the ground. 

In 2013, Cambodia estimated that at least 1,915 km² of its territory was still polluted by mines and explosive remnants of war.  Demining the country will take many more years.

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