Committee Fine-Tuning Proposal for Global Fund Grant
May 29, 2003
By Michelle Vachon
The Cambodia Daily
The Country Coordinating Committee will be working on deadline this afternoon as
members have a final look at the latest grant proposal that must be sent to the
Global Fund for HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria no later than Saturday.
For malaria, the country will ask for $5.2 million over a five-year period, said
Duong Socheat, director of the National Malaria Center. This would be used for
information and education campaigns as part of the country's strategy to control
the disease, he said.
"A large number of people at high risk of malaria live in remote areas," Duong
Socheat said. "We need to make a special effort to go and visit them" to let
them know what causes the disease and how to protect themselves, he said.
The 27 committee members, representing agencies, NGOs and donors, have to decide
how much to request for HIV/AIDS efforts, and to review a request of about $1.3
million over two years to improve health care for pregnant women and children.
Eleven partners have worked together on the malaria proposal, Duong Socheat
said. Apart from the Ministry of Health, the government side includes the
Ministry of Women's Affairs and the Ministry of Education, which plan to get
women, teachers and students involved in malaria prevention programs; and the
Ministry of Defense and the Ministry of Interior, which intend to run
information campaigns for police and military staff working in remote and border
areas.
NGOs include Health Unlimited, Partners for Development, Nomad, World Education,
Population Services International, and the Cambodian Development and Relief
Center for the Poor.
The Global Fund was set up by donor countries and private organizations at the
end of 2001 to support health programs in developing countries.
In January, the fund approved Cambodia's proposal for $32.5 million over five
years with $14.9 million going to HIV/AIDS programs, $6.6 million to
tuberculosis, and $9.98 million to malaria. In April 2002, the fund had granted
$15.9 million to HIV/AIDS programs for three years.
Cambodia is still waiting for the malaria-grant agreement to be signed. The
agreement on HIV/AIDS has been signed, but no money has been distributed.
In the meantime, the rainy season has started, creating conditions for
malaria-transmitting mosquitoes to thrive.
Functioning on emergency funding from the World Health Organization, with
support from World Bank and the US Agency for International Development,
malaria-control program has been reduced to a minimum, Duong Socheat said.
"We are distributing the bed nets we had at the center, and combination-drug
supplies have been sent to the provinces. But we are very concerned," he said.
The government has appealed to the World Bank for additional help, but has not
received an answer, he said.