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41392-023: Decentralized Public Service and Financial Management
Due Diligence Report on Social Safeguard July 2019 CAM: Decentralized Public Service and Financial Management Sector Development Project, Subprogram 2: Sub-National Investment Fund (SNIF) Prepared by SNIF Secretariat for Asian Development Bank (ADB). The Due Diligence Report on Social Safeguard is a document of the borrower. The views expressed herein do not necessarily represent those of ADB's Board of Directors, Management, or staff, and may be preliminary in nature. In preparing any country program or strategy, financing any project, or by making any designation of or reference to a particular territory or geographic area in this document, the Asian Development Bank does not intend to make any judgments as to the legal or other status. 1 Contents CURRENCY EQUIVALENTS .......................................................................................................... 3 ABBREVIATIONS ........................................................................................................................... 3 I. BACKGROUND OF PROJECT AND RATIONALE ..................................................................................... 4 II. SUBPROJECT DESCRIPTION AND SCOPE OF WORKS ........................................................................ 5 III. OBJECTIVES OF THE DUE DILIGENCE REPORT ................................................................................. 10 IV. METHODOLOGY ....................................................................................................................................... 10 -
Occurrence of Sri Lankan Cassava Mosaic Virus
ACIAR-SRA Result-sharing Workshop PresentationPlace tle here of Results - 1 Occurrence of Sri Lankan cassava Date City, Country mosaic virus (SLCMV) th 19 Your Name Here July 2017, Phnom Penh, Cambodia Your e-mail [email protected] Nami Minato Outline q Background – CMD and its distribution in Asia region q SRA cassava mosaic disease surveillance q Results and discussion q Notes for group discussion Cassava mosaic disease (CMD) Symptoms & Yield loss n Cassava mosaic disease infected cassava typically shows mosaic symptoms on leaves and leaf curl. n Yield losses attributed to CMD range 20 to (Photo by Sophearith Sok) 95%, and have been reported to be substantially increased following mixed infection. Transmission n Viruses causing CMD are transmitted by 1. Planting materials (cassava cuttings/seeds) 2. Insect vector, whiteflies Cassava mosaic geminiviruses (CMGs) Virus taxonomy n Viruses causing CMD (cassava mosaic geminiviruses: CMGs) belong to family Geminiviridae, genus Begomovirus. n CMD is caused by 11 species of virus, such as p African cassava mosaic virus (ACMV) p Indian cassava mosaic virus (ICMV) p Sri Lankan cassava mosaic virus (SLCMV) n CMD has been spread in Africa for over 200 years, and in South Asia (India and Sri Lanka). Spatial and temporal distribution Cassava mosaic disease in Asia Indian cassava mosaic virus (ICMV) Sri Lankan cassava mosaic virus (SLCMV) In December 2015, SLCMV was reported in Cambodia Initial report (Fauquet & Fargette, 1990, Plant Dis) 1894 African cassava mosaic disease 1956 Indian cassava mosaic disease -
Download the Full Report
H U M A N “They Treat Us Like Animals” R I G H T S Mistreatment of Drug Users and “Undesirables” in Cambodia’s WATCH Drug Detention Centers “They Treat Us Like Animals” Mistreatment of Drug Users and “Undesirables” in Cambodia’s Drug Detention Centers Copyright © 2013 Human Rights Watch All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America ISBN: 978-1-62313-0817 Cover design by Rafael Jimenez Human Rights Watch is dedicated to protecting the human rights of people around the world. We stand with victims and activists to prevent discrimination, to uphold political freedom, to protect people from inhumane conduct in wartime, and to bring offenders to justice. We investigate and expose human rights violations and hold abusers accountable. We challenge governments and those who hold power to end abusive practices and respect international human rights law. We enlist the public and the international community to support the cause of human rights for all. Human Rights Watch is an international organization with staff in more than 40 countries, and offices in Amsterdam, Beirut, Berlin, Brussels, Chicago, Geneva, Goma, Johannesburg, London, Los Angeles, Moscow, Nairobi, New York, Paris, San Francisco, Tokyo, Toronto, Tunis, Washington DC, and Zurich. For more information, please visit our website: http://www.hrw.org DECEMBER 2013 978-1-62313-0817 “They Treat Us Like Animals” Mistreatment of Drug Users and “Undesirables” in Cambodia’s Drug Detention Centers Map 1: Closed Drug Detention Centers and the Planned National Center .............................. i Map 2: Current Drug Detention Centers in Cambodia .......................................................... ii Summary ........................................................................................................................... 1 Recommendations .............................................................................................................. 7 To the Government of Cambodia .............................................................................................. -
Appendix J.2.3)
Supplementary Appendix H.1 NORTHWEST IRRIGATION SECTOR PROJECT LINK CANAL SUBPROJECT RESETTLEMENT PLAN List of Contents Page 1. The Project 3 2. Impact on Structures and Land Acquisition 4 3. Mitigating Project Impact 5 4. Socio-Economic Situation in the Project Area. 6 4.1 Project Socioeconomic Surveys 6 4.2 Socio-Economic Characteristics Of The Wider Project Area 6 5. Objectives, Policy Framework and Entitlements 16 6. Mitigating Impact and Ensuring the Restoration of Livelihoods of APs 18 7. Participation, Information and Consultation and Grievance Redress 21 7.1 AP Participation 21 7.2 Disclosure of Information to APs 21 7.3 The Grievance Process 22 8. Management and Organisation 24 9. Resettlement Budget 26 10.Implementation Schedule 28 11.Monitoring and Evaluation 28 List of Tables: Number Title Page No. 3.1 Development Agents Working in Area 7 4.1 Demographics of Subproject Area 8 4.2 Village Demographics 8 4.3 Age-Sex distribution of APs 9 4.4 Size of AP households 9 4.5 Incidence of Overall Poverty in Subproject Area 9 4.6 APs Deficit in rice production for household 9 4.7 APs Duration of Rice Deficit last year (months) 9 4.8 Literacy of household head and spouse 10 i Supplementary Appendix H.1 4.9 School attendance of children of primary school age 10 4.10 Reason for non-attendance school 10 4.11 Attendance of school age children: Lower secondary 10 4.12 Reason for non-attendance at secondary school 10 4.13 Village Land, Farming System, Non-Farming Occupations and Mines or UXO Pesence 12 4.14 Bavel District, Kdol Commune, Villages -
DC-Cam 2015 Annual Report
mCÄmNÐlÉkßrkm<úCa DOCUMENTATION CENTER OF CAMBODIA Phnom Penh, Cambodia DC-Cam Annual Report: January 1, 2015-December 31, 2015 Prepared and Compiled by Dr. Kok-Thay ENG and Dara VANTHAN Deputy Directors Edited by Cindy Coleman SRI Board Meeting at Stanford University Second from left Professor Ron Slye, Professor John Ciorciari, Professor Jaya Ramji-Nogales, Professor Beth van Schaack, Youk Chhang, and Dr. Markus Zimmer Documentation Center of Cambodia Searching for the Truth: Memory & Justice EsVgrkKrBitedIm, IK rcg©MnigyutþiFm‘’ 66 Preah Sihanouk Blvd.P.O.Box 1110Phnom PenhCambodia t(855-23) 211-875f (855-23) 210-358 [email protected] www.dccam.org TABLE OF CONTENTS DOCUMENTATION CENTER OF CAMBODIA ............................................................................... 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS ........................................................................................................................ 2 ACRONYMS ................................................................................................................................ 3 Summary .................................................................................................................................... 4 AUGMENT AND MAINTAIN A PUBLICALLY ACCESSIBLE HISTORICAL RECORD OF THE KR PERIOD ...................... 4 SUPPORT THE KRT .......................................................................................................................... 5 INCREASE CAMBODIA’S PUBLIC KNOWLEDGE OF THE KR PERIOD ............................................................. -
Activities on the 2017 Elections Commune Sangkat
Committee For Free and Fair Elections in Cambodia (COMFREL) #138, Str 122 Teuk Laak 1, Toulkork, Phnom Penh xumE®hVl Box: 1145 COMFREL Tel: 023 884 150 Fax:023 885 745 Email [email protected], [email protected] Website www.comfrel.org Final Assessment and Report on the 2017 Commune Council Elections Contents Acronyms ................................................................................................................................................ 4 Foreword ................................................................................................................................................. 7 1. Introduction ....................................................................................................................................... 8 2. Executive Summary .............................................................................................................................. 9 2.1. Principal Findings .......................................................................................................................... 9 2.2 What Others Say ........................................................................................................................... 17 2.3 Overall Assessment ...................................................................................................................... 19 3. Political Environment ......................................................................................................................... 19 3.1 Unilateral legislative changes contrary -
Evaluation Report on ECHO Funded Humanitarian Mine Action Pilot Projects in North-West of Cambodia
James Madison University JMU Scholarly Commons Center for International Stabilization and Global CWD Repository Recovery Fall 10-2003 Evaluation Report on ECHO Funded Humanitarian Mine Action Pilot Projects in North-West of Cambodia Marcel Durocher Agim Hoti Mok Tonh Keo Vut Follow this and additional works at: https://commons.lib.jmu.edu/cisr-globalcwd Part of the Defense and Security Studies Commons, Peace and Conflict Studies Commons, Public Policy Commons, and the Social Policy Commons Recommended Citation Durocher, Marcel; Hoti, Agim; Tonh, Mok; and Vut, Keo, "Evaluation Report on ECHO Funded Humanitarian Mine Action Pilot Projects in North-West of Cambodia" (2003). Global CWD Repository. 1132. https://commons.lib.jmu.edu/cisr-globalcwd/1132 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Center for International Stabilization and Recovery at JMU Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Global CWD Repository by an authorized administrator of JMU Scholarly Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. EVALUATION REPORT ON ECHO FUNDED HUMANITARIAN MINE ACTION PILOT PROJECTS IN NORTH-WEST OF CAMBODIA th October 6 2003 Marcel Durocher Agim Hoti Mok Tonh Keo Vuthy TABLE OF CONTENTS ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS.......................................................................................................... 5 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS .............................................................................................................................. 6 INTRODUCTION............................................................................................................................................ -
Cambodia PRASAC Microfinance Institution
Maybank Money Express (MME) Agent - Cambodia PRASAC Microfinance Institution Branch Location Last Update: 02/02/2015 NO NAME OF AGENT REGION / PROVINCE ADDRESS CONTACT NUMBER OPERATING HOUR 1 PSC Head Office PHNOM PENH #25, Str 294&57, Boeung Kengkang1,Chamkarmon, Phnom Penh, Cambodia 023 220 102/213 642 7.30am-4pm National Road No.5, Group No.5, Phum Ou Ambel, Krong Serey Sophorn, Banteay 2 PSC BANTEAY MEANCHEY BANTEAY MEANCHEY Meanchey Province 054 6966 668 7.30am-4pm 3 PSC POAY PET BANTEAY MEANCHEY Phum Kilometre lek 4, Sangkat Poipet, Krong Poipet, Banteay Meanchey 054 63 00 089 7.30am-4pm Chop, Chop Vari, Preah Net 4 PSC PREAH NETR PREAH BANTEAY MEANCHEY Preah, Banteay Meanchey 054 65 35 168 7.30am-4pm Kumru, Kumru, Thmor Puok, 5 PSC THMAR POURK BANTEAY MEANCHEY Banteay Meanchey 054 63 00 090 7.30am-4pm No.155, National Road No.5, Phum Ou Khcheay, Sangkat Praek Preah Sdach, Krong 6 PSC BATTAMBANG BATTAMBANG Battambang, Battambang Province 053 6985 985 7.30am-4pm Kansai Banteay village, Maung commune, Moung Russei district, Battambang 7 PSC MOUNG RUESSEI BATTAMBANG province 053 6669 669 7.30am-4pm 8 PSC BAVEL BATTAMBANG Spean Kandoal, Bavel, Bavel, BB 053 6364 087 7.30am-4pm Phnom Touch, Pech Chenda, 9 PSC PHNOM PROEK BATTAMBANG Phnum Proek, BB 053 666 88 44 7.30am-4pm Boeng Chaeng, Snoeng, Banan, 10 PSC BANANN BATTAMBANG Battambang 053 666 88 33 7.30am-4pm No.167, National Road No.7 Chas, Group No.10 , Phum Prampi, Sangkat Kampong 11 PSC KAMPONG CHAM KAMPONG CHAM Cham, Krong Kampong Cham, Kampong Cham Province 042 6333 000 7.30am-4pm -
Cambodia: Human Rights Before and After the Elections
May 1993 Vol.5 No.10 CAMBODIA: HUMAN RIGHTS BEFORE AND AFTER THE ELECTIONS I. INTRODUCTION Cambodians will go to the polls on May 23 in an atmosphere of political and ethnic violence and renewed civil war. The elections are the culmination of a 17-month United Nations presence, the largest, most ambitious and most expensive peace-keeping effort ever, which was supposed to bring about an end to the conflict. Instead, Cambodia is faced with as much fighting as when the United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia (UNTAC) entered the country in March 1992, and a spiralling level of serious human rights abuses. The "neutral political environment" that was supposed to be the precondition for elections is entirely absent. The five permanent members of the Security Council and other drafters of the 1991 Paris peace accords, formally known as the Agreements on a Comprehensive Political Settlement of the Cambodia Conflict, are determined to go ahead with the elections regardless. But what happens on May 23 is almost less important than what happens in the days after the results are announced. Asia Watch believes that an analysis of the missteps that led to the current human rights situation is critically important to determining how, or perhaps whether, human rights of Cambodians can be protected under whatever government comes to power then. The reasons for the deterioration in the human rights situation in late 1992 and early 1993 are complex. None of the parties to the conflict has a history of respect for human rights and one, Democratic Kampuchea, better known as the Khmer Rouge, has one of the worst human rights records in modern history. -
Cambodia High Frequency Phone Survey - Idpoor - Round1
Generated by Vanny_Pong, Nov 21, 2020 03:43 Sections: 9, Sub-sections: 1, Questionnaire created by Vanny_Pong, Nov 21, 2020 03:43 Questions: 205. Last modified by Vanny_Pong, Nov 21, 2020 03:43 Questions with enabling conditions: 126 Questions with validation conditions:35 Not shared with anyone Rosters: 5 Variables: 12 Cambodia High Frequency Phone Survey - IDPoor - Round1 SURVEY IDENTIFICATION INFORMATION QUESTIONNAIRE DESCRIPTION [1] INTERVIEW INFORMATION Sub-sections: 1, Rosters: 2, Questions: 38, Static texts: 5, Variables: 7. [2B] BASIC INFORMATION RDD No sub-sections, No rosters, Questions: 18. [2C] SOCIAL ECONOMIC STATUS No sub-sections, No rosters, Questions: 3. [3] KNOWLEDGE, [4] BEHAVIOUR, [5] ACCESS, [6] EMPLOYMENT AND [8] FIES No sub-sections, No rosters, Questions: 91, Static texts: 11, Variables: 3. [7] INCOME LOSS No sub-sections, Rosters: 1, Questions: 8. [10] SHOCKS AND COPING No sub-sections, No rosters, Questions: 5, Static texts: 1. [11] SAFETY NETS No sub-sections, Rosters: 1, Questions: 11. [12] RESULT OF INTERVIEW No sub-sections, No rosters, Questions: 26, Static texts: 2. [CB] CALL BACK No sub-sections, Rosters: 1, Questions: 5, Static texts: 4, Variables: 2. APPENDIX A — CATEGORIES APPENDIX B — VARIABLES APPENDIX C — CATEGORIES FILTERS LEGEND 1 / 42 SURVEY IDENTIFICATION INFORMATION QUESTIONNAIRE DESCRIPTION Basic information Title Cambodia High Frequency Phone Survey - IDPoor - Round1 SURVEY IDENTIFICATION INFORMATION QUESTIONNAIRE DESCRIPTION 2 / 42 [1] INTERVIEW INFORMATION Zone SINGLE-SELECT zone SCOPE: IDENTIFYING -
C.M.A.A Request for Proposal
C.M.A.A REQUEST FOR PROPOSAL RFP No: 001/CMAA/BTB/CFR/2015 For Battambang Land Release Project Annex I Instructions to Offerors A. Introduction 1. General The CMAA is seeking suitably qualified CMAA‐accredited operators to conduct Battambang Land Release Project as per Statement of Work (SOW) attached in Annex‐III. 2. Cost of proposal The Offeror shall bear all costs associated with the preparation and submission of the Proposal, the CMAA will in no case be responsible or liable for those costs, regardless of the conduct or outcome of the solicitation. B. Solicitation Documents 3. Contents of solicitation documents Proposals must offer services for the total requirement. Proposals offering only part of the requirement will be rejected. The Offeror is expected to examine all corresponding instructions, forms, terms and specifications contained in the Solicitation Documents. Failure to comply with these documents will be at the Offeror’s risk and may affect the evaluation of the Proposal. 4. Clarification of solicitation documents A prospective Offeror requiring any clarification of the Solicitation Documents may notify the CMAA in writing to [email protected]. The CMAA will respond in writing to any request for clarification of the Solicitation Documents that it receives earlier than 20 November 2014. Written copies of the CMAA’s response (including an explanation of the query but without identifying the source of inquiry) will be sent by email to all prospective Offerors that has received the Solicitation Documents. 5. Amendments of solicitation documents At any time prior to the deadline for submission of Proposals, the CMAA may, for any reason, whether at its own initiative or in response to a clarification requested by a prospective Offeror, modify the Solicitation Documents by amendment. -
NOURISH SEMI-ANNUAL PROGRESS REPORT Reporting Period: April 2016 – September 2016 Cooperative Agreement No: AID-442-A-14-00006
Photo byPhoto Jeunsafy Sen NOURISH SEMI-ANNUAL PROGRESS REPORT Reporting Period: April 2016 – September 2016 Cooperative Agreement No: AID-442-A-14-00006 SUBMITTED BY: SAVE THE CHILDREN SUBMISSION DATE: OCTOBER 28, 2016 CONTACT INFORMATION: INNA SACCI, COP, [email protected] NOURISH SEMI-ANNUAL REPORT DATE: October 28, 2016 ACRONYMS ANC Antenatal Care BFCI Baby Friendly Community Initiative BSC Business Service Center CARD Council for Agricultural and Rural Development CC Commune Council CCT Conditional Cash Transfer CCWC Commune Council for Women and Children DHS Demographic and Health Survey CLTS Community Led Total Sanitation ECH Empowering Communities for Health Project FSN Food Security and Nutrition FTF Feed the Future GDP Gross Domestic Product GMP Growth Monitoring and Promotion HAZ Height-for-age Z-score HC Health Center HEF Health Equity Fund IE Impact Evaluation MCH Maternal and Child Health MIS Management Information System MEP Monitoring and Evaluation Plan MAFF Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries MOH Ministry of Health MOP Ministry of Planning Reporting Period: April 2016 – September 2016 Page 2 NOURISH SEMI-ANNUAL REPORT DATE: October 28, 2016 MRD Ministry of Rural Development NCDD National Committee for Sub-National Democratic Development NECHR National Ethical Committee for Health Research NNP National Nutrition Program OD Operational District ODF Open Defecation Free OEC Operations Enfants du Cambodge PDRD Provincial Department of Rural Development PHD Provincial Health Department QHS Quality Health Services Project RFFEP Rice Field Fish Enhancement Project RGC Royal Government of Cambodia SAM Severe Acute Malnutrition SBCC Social and Behavior Change Communication SIF Small Indigenous Fish SME Small and Medium Enterprises SPP Stunting Prevention Program UNICEF United Nation’s Children’s Fund URC University Research Corporation, Inc.