The Phnom Penh Post

Japanese aid to improve firefighti­ng capabiliti­es

- Long Kimmarita

THE Japanese embassy in Cambodia has provided more than $200,000 through their Grant Assistance for Grassroots Human Security Projects (KUSANONE) to improve fire-fighting capabiliti­es in the capital.

The grant agreement was signed on January 18 between Japanese ambassador to Cambodia Masahiro Mikami and Phnom Penh municipal governor Khuong Sreng.

Municipal hall spokesman Meth Meas Pheakdey told The Post that the grant will provide added security and safety to Phnom Penh residents by helping to prevent and put out fires.

“I thank the ambassador for showing us the generous hearts of the Japanese people. This grant shows the love, considerat­ion and care of the Japanese people for the residents of Phnom Penh,” he said.

Mikami said this grant will go towards the purchase of a fire engine with a 40m high ladder which will be the first of its kind ever used in Phnom Penh. It will also cover a chemicaleq­uipped fire engine and two waterpumpi­ng fire engines.

Mikami said a training programme on the operation and maintenanc­e of this fire-fighting equipment will be provided.

This will help Cambodian fire-fighters respond to any fires in the increasing­ly common high-rise buildings of Phnom Penh, as well as to incidents involving hazardous materials in a fast and efficient manner.

“This improves safety and protects the property of the approximat­ely 400,000 residents of Phnom Penh, along with the city’s many visiting tourists and business travellers from around the world,” he said.

Mikami added that a memorandu m of u nder s t a nd i ng ( MoU ) bet ween t he municipa l ha l l a nd Japan’s Safety Sakura Service Co Ltd to achieve improvemen­ts in the firef ighting and rescue capabiliti­es of the Phnom Penh Fire Brigade was a lso sig ned a long wit h t he g ra nt agreement.

The municipal administra­tion, the fire brigade and Safety Sakura Service Co Ltd will collaborat­e with the aim of further strengthen­ing their relationsh­ip and improving Cambodia’s fire-fighting capabiliti­es based on the terms of the MoU.

San Chey, the executive director of the Affiliated Network for Social Accountabi­lity, said in the past extinguish­ing fires in Phnom Penh and the provinces had involved many different organisati­ons and individual­s from police forces on over to branches of the military.

“Cambodia’s emergency response to fires still has a lot of problems. Everything needs to improve. Especially when responding to house fires the focus has to be on helping the victims and extinguish­ing the fires immediatel­y before they spread,” he said.

Concerning the grant, Chey welcomed the assistance but hoped that the government and its Japanese developmen­t partners would go further in their efforts than the provision of new equipment and engage in the reforms necessary to create a system that adequately protect all lives and property from dangerous fires.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Cambodia