COVID-19: New Cases Jump to Nearly 600 This Morning

Cambodia’s COVID-19 tally increased to 96,935 with the detection of 596 new cases this morning, according to a press release of the Ministry of Health.
Of the new infections, 177 were imported and the rest were linked to the Feb. 20 community outbreak, it pointed out.
Besides, the ministry registered 397 new recoveries and six new deaths; bringing the total cured and death cases in the Kingdom to 92,015 and 1,987, respectively.
The first COVID-19 case was reported in Cambodia in late January 2020 in Preah Sihanouk province. The confirmed cases have surged quickly this year due to the Feb. 20 incident.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

WHO: Cambodia Reboots Its COVID-19 Response Strategy and Measures

The following is a statement of the World Health Organisation (WHO) Representative Office for Cambodia AKP received yesterday evening:
“Cambodia is in a new phase of the pandemic in which decreasing case numbers, high vaccination coverage, and a more transmissible circulating variant threaten a hidden surge. The government has thus rebooted its approach with an evidence-based and more focused strategy to suppress transmission, minimise social disruptions, and protect the people.
As of 5 September, more than 95,000 cases and 1,900 deaths have been reported. The daily reported numbers of both cases and deaths have been declining for several weeks. The declines have been reported across most provinces.
As cases have declined, vaccination coverage has increased. As of 5 September 2021, more than 95% of the originally 10-million target population in Cambodia have received at least one dose, including 98% of health care workers fully vaccinated, 95% of older people with one dose, and 77% of older people with two doses. The vaccination rollout has reached many vulnerable populations living in remote areas and those with underlying health conditions as well. Vaccinations are reducing severe disease, hospitalizations, and deaths due to COVID-19.
Although the data indicate an improving situation, the risk of a surge of COVID-19 is very high. Like many countries, Cambodia has been racing against more transmissible variants throughout 2021. The alpha variant was detected early in the year and dominated most of the outbreak. Recently, delta was detected among migrants returning through land borders and has now been detected among residents of most provinces.
More effective implementation of public health and social measures and the speedy vaccine rollout have reduced transmission; yet, 20 months into the pandemic, people are weary. They struggle to comply with movement restrictions. Many pinned their hopes on the early arrival of vaccines and their rapid rollout. The success of the vaccines in preventing severe disease could mean that transmission continues undetected. These factors tend to lead people to drop their guard and return to the old ways of interacting with one another, ways through which a very transmissible variant can wreak havoc.
In mid-2021, with the support of the World Health Organisation (WHO), the Royal Government of Cambodia, particularly its Ministry of Health, initiated efforts to reflect on the strategy to curb new surges. The joint Ministry of Health-WHO missions engaged all provinces to explore successes and challenges of their response and generate feasible solutions to suppress transmission and promote health and socio economic recovery in this new phase. The joint mission complemented these engagements with analyses on virus transmission, cluster analyses, and assessments of the effectiveness of public health and social measures in Cambodia.
The resulting strategy is a response reboot. It outlines priorities for suppressing transmission that centre on the Cambodian core value of keeping families and communities safe.
‘An impressive part of the Royal Government of Cambodia’s strategy is that risk-based decision-making is being applied together with insights into the Cambodian context, including social and cultural dimensions,’ said Dr. Li Ailan, WHO Representative to Cambodia. ‘For example, recent social listening research shows that in Cambodia people worry more about the health of their loved ones than their own. This is a powerful motivator to make individual right choices to take COVID-19 measures for protecting their family and community,’ said Dr. Li.
To strengthen and advance Cambodia’s community engagement system, including citizen participation on COVID-19 and beyond, WHO supported the Ministry of Health (MoH) and local authorities, technically and financially, to launch renewed community engagement initiatives in nine provinces in August 2021.
The initiative moves beyond awareness and education to empowering people with information and decision-making tools to make the right choices that protect their lives and livelihoods. It integrates the health and beyond-health sectors, including mobilisation and participation of community leaders, village chiefs, religious leaders, school principals, and more importantly people in the community. For example, the Commune Committee for Women and Children (CCWC), among other existing community systems, are being strengthened for COVID-19 prevention, preparedness and response in the community.
Provinces have also been mobilising non-governmental organisations (NGOs) to work together to support communities.
Another important factor in the strategy is the emphasis on local leadership, local innovative solutions, local ownership, and accountability. Practical examples of local solutions include changing the layout of open-air markets. In Kandal province, local leaders moved a market onto a sports field while limiting the number of shoppers to ensure physical distancing. In Siem Reap, local leaders spread a market was along a road to ensure optimal distancing.
To encourage public participation and motivate everyone to adhere with critical public health and social measures in the context of new variants, the Ministry of Health through the Sub-Committee on Education, Training, and Public Communication of the Inter-ministerial Committee to Fight COVID-19 has recently launched a nationwide communication campaign under the theme of ‘Acting together to stop COVID-19 transmission’. A key aspect of this campaign is community engagement and individual responsibility and right choice for preventing the spread of virus in household and community.
The priorities of the strategy are to pause 3Cs (closed spaces, crowded places, and close-contact) settings until transmission is suppressed; to implement the 3 Dos and 3 Don’ts (wear a mask, wash hands regularly, maintain distance of at least 1.5 meters, avoid confined and enclosed spaces, avoid crowded spaces, and avoid touching each other); to prevent and prepare for a successful ‘circuit breaker’ (i.e. movement restriction); to safely open low-risk businesses while preparing higher risk businesses to implement risk mitigation measures before opening; to limit non-essential travel and gatherings; and to make monitoring and compliance systems fully functional.
No community is safe until every community is safe. The Pandemic affects every province and every community; so, everyone must play their role responsibly. Our society’s safety is based on individual actions. Only then can we curb the spread of COVID-19 and look forward to a brighter future. This adjusted strategy and measures, with individual and collective actions, will help give Cambodia a new hope and the best chance of winning this fight against COVID-19.
As we implement the response strategy and measures, we must continue to strengthen the health-system response to detect and responds to outbreaks, through (1) early detection and targeted non pharmaceutical interventions; (2) expanded and efficient health care capacities and pathways, especially intensive care unit capacity; and (3) vaccinating 100% of the vulnerable and eligible populations.”

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

Senior Information Official Responds to Statements by Some Media Associations

H.E. Meas Sophorn, Undersecretary of State and Spokesperson of the Ministry of Information, has reacted against some media associations’ statements accusing competent authorities of blocking, intimidating and violating the press freedom during their media coverage.
“Those statements were intended to mislead the public by making baseless allegations against the competent authorities,” he told AKP this morning.
When competent authorities are conducting an operation at any location, they have the full right not to allow any person without relevant authority, including journalists, to enter the location because it may affect or disturb or obstruct or endanger the competent authorities being on duty, he explained.
H.E. Meas Sophorn continued that journalists have the right to get information from all sources related to any incident or event or operation and must publish factual and comprehensive information. But if they fail to find sources from all parties involved, it is the journalists themselves who violate the rights of others, he underlined.
The spokesperson added that if any person or party feels that s/he has been violated or intimidated by another person or party, s/he has the right to file a complaint to the court against that person or party in order to demand justice for oneself, not to seek justice on the street.
The issuance of any statement condemning or indicting any person or party should be examined and investigated as precisely as possible because the accused person or party can also exercise their legal rights to protect their legitimacy, stressed H.E. Meas Sophorn.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

Preparedness Tools Ready for Emergency Response to Flood Disaster

The National Committee for Disaster Management (NCDM) has prepared tools for disaster management to rescue victims of flood disaster in the rainy season this year.
The working group of NCDM has followed up the water level along the Mekong River and set procedures for emergency response, NCDM said in a meeting held on Sept. 7.
The preparedness tools are 1,206 vehicles, 179 boats, and 320 speedy boats for emergency rescue mission during this year’s rainy season.
The NCDM has received relief as food reserves worth some US$6.4 million from Prime Minister Samdech Akka Moha Sena Padei Techo Hun Sen and his spouse as well as relief from ministries and private sector for the rescue mission.
In the meeting, H.E Kun Kim, Senior Minister and First Vice President of NCDM called on all stakeholders to share information of disaster-affected situation specifically and timely for emergency response operation.
According to NCDM, the floods in Cambodia in October 2020 killed at least 42 and affected over 175,000 families.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press

DPM Prak Sokhonn Highlights Important Role of Cambodia as ASEAN Chair 2022

Deputy Prime Minister, Minister of Foreign affairs and International Cooperation H.E. Prak Sokhonn has highlighted the important role of Cambodia in becoming the ASEAN chairman for 2022.
“It it is an opportunity for Cambodia to showcase itself and its capability in paving the way for maintaining ASEAN unity, solidarity, durability and centrality,” said the Cambodian top diplomat in his opening remarks of lecture series on “Cambodia & ASEAN and Cambodia as ASEAN Chairmanship 2022” organised by the National Institute of Diplomacy and International Relations of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation (MFAIC), via videoconference this morning.
H.E. Prak Sokhonn also raised the challenges that being a Chairman, Cambodia could be faced with and how Cambodia can contribute to the resolving of both regional and international conflicts, especially given the tensions of geopolitical competition among the superpowers and other currently emerging issues.
H.E. Deputy Prime Minister pointed out the achievements of ASEAN, including its legacies as in a number of key regional architectures, which then serves as reassurances to maintain stability and prosperity within the region.
Taking the opportunity, H.E. Prak Sokhonn reaffirmed Cambodia’s commitment to the continued promotion of an action-oriented approach that is based on openness, honesty, integrity, good faith, solidarity and harmony within ASEAN to effectively address the common challenges facing ASEAN including traditional and non-traditional issues, emerging non-traditional issues that ASEAN is confronting, and the socio-economic recovery in post Covid-19.
According to the National Institute of Diplomacy and International Relations, the lecture series is aimed at (1) raising awareness of the relations between Cambodia and ASEAN, (2) promoting Cambodia’s role and readiness for the ASEAN Chairmanship in 2022, and (3) sharing opportunities and challenges for Cambodia as the ASEAN chairman in 2022 and particularly in the context of COVID-19 pandemic. These series of lecture are divided into three sessions of which the targeted audience includes MFAIC officials, officials from relevant ministries and institutions and Cambodian youth respectively. The lectures are delivered by H.E. Mr. Sim Vireak, Director General of General Department of ASEAN, MFAIC.

Source: Agency Kampuchea Press