Status and Achievements
POVERTY ALLEVIATION
UNDP's cooperation as regards Poverty
Alleviation comprises a targeted series of
development support activities aimed at
building national capacities to plan, implement,
and monitor interventions in a sustainable
and participatory manner. In so doing,
UNDP cooperation is aimed at having an
immediate impact at the grassroots level, and,
where necessary, to respond to emergency
situations. One 'of the major new initiatives during
1995 will be the launching of a broad-
based exercise that is to result in the design of
a National Action Plan for Alleviating
Poverty. This exercise is to provide the Royal
Government and its development partners
with an action-oriented, cross-sectoral frame-
work for improving the standards of living of
the poorest.
UNDP-supported projects in the areas of integrated
Area Development and Employment
Generation have combined their efforts to
promote improved standards of living in a
total of eight provinces of Cambodia
(Battambang, Siem Reap, Pursat, Banteay
Meanchey, Kandal, Takeo, Kompong Cham,
and Kampot) and Phnom Penh. These projects
, originally conceived as part of UNDP's
support to the reintegration
and resettlement of refugees,
internally displaced persons
and demobilized soldiers,
now provide support to a
wide range of rural and
urban populations.
Specific areas of concentration
and major achievements are as follows:
A. INTEGRATED AREA DEVELOPMENT
The UNDP/OPS-executed
CARERE Cambodian
Resettlement and
Reintegration) programme
has both direct assistance
and capacity-building objectives
which are closely interlinked at
provincial, district, commune and
village level. Over the past year in particular,
CARERE has undergone a significant transition
in recognition of the progressively
increasing role being assumed by
Government bodies. Specifically, in the four
northwest provinces where it intervenes,
CARERE has supported since its beginning:
1. the construction of 163 km of labor-based
roads and rehabilitation /maintenance of
133 km of machine-based secondary
roads;
2. de-mining of access roads and abandoned
villages enabling 12,000 displaced persons
and returnees to resettle and take up productive
activities;
3. production of over 1,350 hand-dug wells,
200 drilled wells, and excavation of 127
ponds providing access to potable water
to an estimated 250,000 people;
4. rehabilitation of irrigation schemes
enabling 21,000 ha of agricultural land to
be brought back into production benefitting
20,000 families, and assisting land
preparation and provision of agricultural
inputs resulting in production of nearly
17,000 tons of rice benefitting 11,000
returnee families, and provision of vegetable
seeds to 55,000 returnee families;
5. construction of 193 new schools with 737
classrooms and rehabilitation of 121
schools with 393 classrooms, with a combined
capacity of over 72,000 students;
6. construction of 28 infirmaties primarily at
commune level and 10 health centers at
district and province level serving a combined
population of 320,000 persons;
7. the construction of eight new agricultural
stations and training centers, and the
establishment of 11 tree nurseries and a
fisheries station which contribute to the
production of improved varieties of rice
seed and fruit trees, extension services in
crop management, training, management
and development planning for provincial
ministry staff and farmers;
8. the formation of Provincial Water and
Sanitation committees to assist
Government to define standards and
coordinate interventions in the sector;
9. in collaboration with UNICEF and WHO,
the development of provincial health
plans, patient referral services, nurse
training, and the establishment of provincial
health training facilities and outreach
primary health care training programmes;
(10) the provision of training in income
generation, technical and administrative
fields as well as functional literacy to over
1,600 persons (70% women), training in
community development and agricultural
techniques to almost 500 persons, and
water use education to over 30,000 school
children.
Direct implementation of CARERE projects
by provincial Government departments has
increased up to 42% in 1994, and is expected
to rise to approximately 70%, in 1995, while
subcontracting with other organizations
(NGOs and village groups) will continue for
the remaining 30% . Already several hundred
village groups have been formed through
CARERE's efforts for constructing schools,
managing rural credit through village banks,
managing water use in irrigation schemes,
and for rice seed multiplication schemes and
village rice banks, as well as village work
brigades for roads construction and rehabilitation.
In 1995, assistance to the formation of
Village Development Committees will be a
major focus of CARERE capacity-building, an
effort which has already begun with considerable
success in Banteay Meanchey.
Furthermore, CARERE will continue to
emphasize capacity-building at the provincial
level with the Provincial Department for
Rural Development and the Provincial Rural
Development Committees, both of which are
strongly supported through provincial planning,
sectoral meetings, and project approval
exercises, intended to ensure full ownership
by Government departments and provincial
authorities.
While UNDP finances the technical assistance,
management and operational support
costs of the programme, generous cost-sharing
contributions from the Netherlands, the
United States of America, Sweden, Norway,
Finland, Australia, and the United Kingdom,
as well as separate agreements with the
United Nations High Commissioner for
Refugees, the Caisse Franqaise de
Developpement and the European Union (yet
to be concluded), have financed the programme's
direct interventions at the provincial level.
In 1995, CARERE will open an
office in Rattanak Kiri province which, funds
permitting, could cover Mondulkiri in 1996.
B. EMPLOYMENT AND INCOME GENERATION
Executed by the International Labor
Organization (ILO), this programme has two
components, the first of which is the promotion
of small or micro-business employment
through a combination of skills and management
training, and credit. As of January 1995,
six regional vocational training centers and
eight Local Economic Development Agencies
(LEDAS, branches of a Cambodian NGO
making up the Association of Cambodian
LEDAS, or ACLEDA) are operational. Over
2,000 people participated in skills training in
a variety of areas, selected on the basis of recommendations
emanating from Training
Needs Assessments and Business
Opportunity Surveys. Many of these 2,000
people also benefitted from small business
training and credit. In total, over 1,700
trainees benefitted from business management
training, of whom over 1,000 (68%
women) actually started or expanded businesses,
many with the assistance of LEDA
administered credit. These programmes have
benefitted a total of over 25,000 people by
raising family incomes by between 45 and
6596 for those involved in micro and small
businesses. In addition, the National Training
Secretariat and the National Training Center
at Tek Thla have received infrastructural,
institutional, and methodological capacity-
building support. Finally, a Memorandum of
Understanding has been signed between the
Ministry of Education, the UNDP/ILO vocational
training project, and GTZ for the development
of a National Vocational Education
and Training (VET) Strategy which will be the
precursor to the formulation of a VET Master
Plan for Cambodia.
The other major component of the
UNDP/ILO-supported Employment
Generation Programme is the use of Labor-
Based Appropriate Technology (LBAT) in
rural infrastructure development works.
Since its beginning, this programme has
successfully generated more than 1.2 million
days of employment. Workers have been
compensated for their labor through a combination
of cash remuneration and food for
work provided by the World Food
Programme (WFP). Over 150 engineers, technicians
and supervisors in the Ministry of
Public Works and Transport have been
trained in labor-based methods of infrastructure
construction and rehabilitation, and are
able to conduct such works with limited
intervention from external advisors.
Altogether 240 km of secondary roads and 66
km of secondary and tertiary irrigation canals
covering 12,000 ha have been constructed or
rehabilitated, and local village maintenance
and operations systems put in place. In addition,
essential clean-up work at the World
Heritage site of Angkor has been organized
and a cost-effective maintenance system
established. It has been agreed with the Royal
Government to develop a national strategy
for the use of Labor Based Appropriate
Technology. As one element of such a national
strategy, the programme is also providing
support to the Institute of Technology of
Cambodia (ITC) to integrate LBAT into its
In addition to UNDP financing, the
Netherlands has been and continues to be a
generous contributor to this Programme.
C. DEMINING
With UNDP assistance, considerable international
support has been mobilized since last
year's ICORC meeting for the cause of demining
in Cambodia, which, pooled together,
has enabled the Cambodian Mine Action
Center (CMAC) to develop into the central
national structure for ridding the Cambodian
countryside of its mines. Over 6.4 million
square meters of land have been demined by
CMAC, over 25 million square meters have
been marked as no-go zones, and tens of
thousands of land mines and other explosive
devices have been removed from lands utilized
by Cambodia's rural populations. Mine
awareness, training and mine marking conducted
by CMAC (among others) have
together contributed to a substantial reduction
in national mine-related casualties.
Over the past year - with the assistance of 28
external technical advisors (financed by
Australia, Belgium, Canada, the Netherlands,
and New Zealand, as well as an additional 8
under bilateral arrangements with Norway
and France) and the provision of UNDP-
funded support to CMAC logistical, financial,
and administrative functions - CMAC has
become -an efficient and well-structured organization.
With a total of 1,572 personnel, it can
deploy 41 demining platoons, 16 mine marking
teams and 10 explosive ordnance disposal
teams in the field. A competent cadre of
instructors is available at the training center
to continue improving on technical demining
procedures and maintaining standards.
Finally, CMAC's data base currently registers
over 2,000 known minefields nationwide and
serves as a common resource for national and
international organizations alike.
The Trust Fund target set at the beginning of
the two-year programme was USD20 million.
To date, USD 10 million in cash contributions
(as well as $2 million in equipment from the
United States of America and Sweden) have
been received from Japan, United States,
United Kingdom, Denmark, Australia, the
Netherlands, Canada, Norway, New Zealand,
and the Holy See, and another $2.1 million
are expected from Sweden. This leaves a total
of $8 million to be mobilized between now
and the end of the programme of assistance in
April 1996.
D. ENVIRONMENT AND NATURAL RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
Cambodia has a considerable endowment in
natural resources and bio-diversity which, if
managed properly, has the potential to make
significant contributions to its economy and
to the long term food security of the
Cambodian people. UNDP has provided
advisory services for the formulation of a
framework environmental law and draft minerals
law, concept papers for the creation of a
national capacity for water quality control,
the establishment of a national environmental
action plan, the establishment of an integrated
resource information center (IRIC) UNDP
has also undertaken wide-ranging environmental
education and awareness activities
including eleven small-scale initiatives implemented
with NGOs at village level. UNDP
has received generous contributions from
both Finland and Australia for a number of
activities in this sector.
UNDP will continue to support the
Government in the area of environmental and
natural resource management, through assistance
to education and awareness building,
including integration of environmental education
into primary and secondary school curricula,
sustainable use of natural resources,
health and hygiene including village-based
water and sanitation projects, small-scale tree
nurseries and replanting activities, sustainable
fisheries, and sound advice in the use of
organic and chemical fertilizers and pesticides,
and on-going assistance to the sustainable
management of Cambodia's water
resources including the sub-regional support
to the establishment of the Mekong River
Commission. As regards
the forestry sector, UNDP
will support the preparation of a management
action plan and provide capacity building assistance
in carrying out a pilot forestry inventory.
Finally, the Ministry of
Environment will publish
in 1995, with UNDP support, the first ever State
of the Environment Report for Cambodia.
E. AGRICULTURE AND IRRIGATION
UNDP's principal
achievements in the agricultural and irrigation
sectors were the production of the Agricultural
Development Options Review (ADOR) and the
Irrigation Rehabilitation Study of 841 irrigation
schemes in Cambodia. The ADOR exercise was
under taken by participation of the major
stakeholders, thereby promoting collaboration and
common problem-solving. By highlighting
the major potentials and constraints to the
agricultural sector in Cambodia, the results of
this process provide a sound reference for
agricultural policy decision-makers over the
next five years. Likewise, the Irrigation
Rehabilitation Study - which, among other
things, identified (at pre-feasibility phase) 10
economically viable medium-scale irrigation
schemes and five capacity building projects -
is of immediate relevance in guiding the allocation
of resources for irrigation rehabilitation.
Furthermore, UNDP has initiated a rural
credit project which targets both village-level
direct assistance in the creation of local funding
desks as well as capacity building at the
central level to define and monitor national
policy with regard to rural credit. With parallel
arrangements with the Caisse Francaise de
Develop-pement and UNICEF, and in cooperation
with other major multi- and bilateral organizations
and the NGO community, UNDP will
thus support the establishment of a National
Rural Credit Committee and rural credit policy
standards and practices.
In addition to on-going efforts in the context of
UNDP's Area Development and Public
Administration Reform programmes, new
support interventions will include high-level
missions to assist UNDP and the Government
to determine key entry points for policy-level
support to the agriculture and irrigation sectors.
UNDP will also provide targeted assistance to
the Government for the establishment of a
national, financially-sustainable and effective
fertilizer distribution system in
cooperation with the Caisse Francaise de
Develop-pement and the Belgian Government,
and will provide interim funding to the
Agricultural College at Prek Leap in education
management and curriculum development.
DEVELOPMENT MANAGEMENT
In order to facilitate the country's transition
to a market economy, based on the rule- of
law, and to assist in the re-definition of the
State's mandates and functions, major UNDP
support programmes are being implemented
to assist in the formulation of policies and
reforms, and to provide capacity building
support. This comprises the following components.
A. MACROECONOMC MANAGEMENT
UNDP's programme of technical assistance in
the area of macroeconomic management supports
the Royal Government's reform programme
emphasizing macroeconomic stabilization,
rebuilding of institutions, and re-establishing
the social and economic infrastructure.
In collaboration with the Asian
Development Bank, UNDP has provided
advisory services and training with respect to
four areas of macro-economic management,
namely, macro-economic planning, fiscal
reform, money and banking, and statistics. As
regards the latter, the collaborative UNDP-
AsDB technical assistance has supported the
Ministry of Planning in preparing the first
socioeconomic survey of Cambodia, based
on a sample of 1,327 households. To date, the
first report has been published, providing key
data on demographic indicators, labor force,
migration, housing and income, as well as
detailed data on consumer expenditures.
UNDP has, in the process of conducting and
processing the survey, provided considerable
institutional capacity building. This extensive
training has benefitted over 50 central and
provincial civil servants in survey fieldwork
and analysis. UNDP funding for this programme,
amounts to $1.5 million, with $2.39
million in co-funding by the AsDB.
In addition, UNDP, in collaboration with the
IMF, has assisted in the design of a comprehensive
technical assistance programme in
support of fiscal and monetary management.
The programme of UNDP-IMF technical
assistance is focused on two principal objectives:
1. the consolidation of a modem financial sector
by assisting in the development of the
National Bank of, Cambodia into an independent
central bank with strong policy and supervisory
capabilities, and
2. supporting substantive improvements in
the government ability to mobilize revenue
through tax and customs reform.
Long-term technical support to the
National Bank aims to strengthen bank
supervision, operations, accounting, cash
management, research and exchange
functions. Support to the Ministry of
Economy and Finance is focused on tax
administration reform and capacity building
within the Customs Department.
UNDP's commitment to this programme
of support is USD2.6 million with additional
parallel funding by the IMF of USD1.7 million.
B. SECTORAL POLICY AND MANAGEMENT
The common approach of UNDP support at
the sectoral level, and as regards line ministries,
is to strengthen policy and management functions
with the aim of improving the delivery of key public
services at the grass-roots level. In addition,
several ministries will be selected as "pilot" cases,
as part of UNDP's support to the Government's Public
Administration Reform programme.
In Health, a joint UN Agencies-bilateral
donor initiative is under way to assist the
Royal Government of Cambodia in its efforts
to reform the health sector. UNDP support is
aimed at assisting the Ministry of Health in
defining the size, role, structure and financing
requirements of the health system and in
establishing management support systems.
Following earlier support at, foremost, the
central level, the recently implemented second
phase will equally concentrate at provincial and
district health systems. The Ministry
of Health will be one such "pilot" case as part
of the Public Administration Reform programme.
Initiatives instituted to strengthen
capacity and improve service delivery at the
Ministry of Health will provide a measure of
the reform's progress and, in turn, ensure that
lessons learned in this project are applied to
other programmes in - other sectors.
Significant capacity-building to the Ministry
of Health has been ensured in 1994, and will
continue to be provided until 1996. UNDP's
contribution amounts to $3.12 million, with
additional parallel funding of approximately
$2 million from UK/ODA, WHO and the
American Red Cross.
In Education, UNDP, in collaboration with
UNESCO, has assisted the Government in
preparing an initial sector plan entitled
"Rebuilding Quality Education and Training
in Cambodia." The sector plan was reviewed
at a national education seminar held in
January of 1994. Subsequently, this plan has
been utilized as part of the AsDB's sectoral
planning exercise resulting in a comprehen-
sive investment plan that was reviewed at a
Government-donor meeting in December
1994. Additionally, a second phase
UNDP/UNESCO support programme, which
includes a UNDP contribution of $3.2 million,
has been designed, and is about to be imple-
mented. This programme, funded with a $3.2
million UNDP contribution, is designed to
strengthen the capacity of senior management
of the Ministry of Education in planning and
management capabilities for enhanced policy
formulation and decision making. As regards
Higher Education, UNDP support to the
Institute of Technology of Cambodia (ITC)
will be continued throughout 1995, with
UNDP funding of in total $ 1.6 million.
In the Tourism sector, a preparatory assis-
tance project was initiated in January of 1994.
The purpose of this project was to provide
capacity building to the Ministry of Tourism
for the planning, development, marketing,
and management of tourism to Cambodia.
Additionally, the project assisted in the for-
mulation of a human resource development
strategy for the sector. Outputs already
achieved include new regulations governing
tourism services, a project proposal for the
creation of a national tourism training center,
surveys on arrivals and departures at
Pochentong International Airport and hotels
in Phnom Penh. The full UNDP-supported
tourism sector project is signed and will begin
in the very near future.
C. ADMINISTRATIVE REFORM
Following the Royal Government decision
on Administrative Reform, UNDP has been
instrumental in facilitating consensus build-
ing and in providing technical assistance for
the actual design of the National Programme
of Administrative Reform (NPAR). At the
same time, UNDP has assisted the design of a
comprehensive support programme (requir-
ing US$ 8 million in technical assistance,
including a component funded by UNDP at
US$ 3.1 million), which has just recently been
approved. The NPAR, and UNDP support,
component comprise the following areas:
1. structuring of the Royal Government and
its administration including the legal
framework for the government and the
roles and responsibilities of ministries,
2. strengthening administrative capacity and
service delivery of key operational min-
istries including health, education and
agriculture,
3. reforming the civil service through
�remodelage�,' census of public servants,
and re-deployment and re-training
schemes,
4. human resource development of govern-
ment staff to include training in adminis-
tration and management skills,
5. re-defining and strengthening the rela-
tionship between central and provincial
administrations.
Initial implementation support has so far
resulted in agreement on the organigram of
the Inter-ministerial Committee in charge of
the management of the NPAR. Work Plans
have been prepared for the various compo-
nents of the NPAR, including further specifi-
cation of support requirements. This will
allow for more systematic coordination with
interested donors. Furthermore, support has
been provided to preparatory measures.
regarding civil service reform, including the
recently held "comptage' (headcount) of
Cambodian Government civil servants.
Project profiles for donor support are being
prepared by the Government with UNDPs
assistance, while already several bilateral and
multilateral donors have confirmed their
intention to provide resources in support of
the NPAR. In this connection, there is agree-
ment for UNDP and the World Bank to coop-
erate in the design of scenarios for downsiz-
ing the public service, including social safety
nets and re-training schemes. Such schemes,
once designed, will be presented to donors, in
addition to the above mentioned support
requirements.
D. GOOD GOVERNANCE
UNDP in collaboration with the UN Center
for Human Rights is about to finalize the
design of a support Programme for providing
technical advice to the newly established
democratic, legislative and judicial institu-
tions. A major component of the support will
be aimed at strengthening of local NGOs
involved in Human Rights. UNDP will pro-
vide a contribution of $2 million.
E. AID COORDINATION
In the context of Aid Coordination. UNDP is
instituting a programme of support to the
Cambodian Development Council (CDC) to
articulate and operationalize its mandate and
functions. This support will promote and
facilitate consensus building between CDC
and line ministries in the implementation of
the 'National Program to Rehabilitate and
Develop Cambodia", thereby strengthening
these national institutions to mobilize, pro-
gramme and implement externally provided
development resources. Policy development
and strategic planning assistance will be sup-
plemented by the development of a
Management Information System on exter--
nally financed projects and assistance. This
database will provide statistics on Public
Development Assistance and interface with
the Public Investment Programme that the
Royal Government is establishing in associa-
tion with the development banks. These mea-
sures will contribute to dearer understanding
of Cambodia's needs in matters of external
assistance. UNDP is also providing assistance
to the CDC to strengthen its capacity to nego-
tiate international development- assistance
agreements.
F. INFRASTRUCTURE
UNDP in Cambodia has launched from 1991
to 1994, several projects aimed at directly
rehabilitating essential elements of
Cambodia's infrastructure as well as under-
taking feasibility studies to enable infrastruc-
ture rehabilitation support by bilateral donors
and international credit institutions. UNDP
has thus provided support for these efforts
totalling $21.9, of which $14.8 have come
from core UNDP resources, as summarized
below. With other donors commencing sup-
port in various areas of infrastructure, UNDP
is in a position to phase out its direct assis-
tance, while, focussing on management and
planning support in selected areas.
(a) Transport and infrastructure rehabilitation
Road and bridges emergency repair works on
Road No.5, UNDP-managed Trust fund
whose contributors were the Government of
Sweden ($4.9 million), USAID ($2 million)
and the Dutch Government ($113,888).
Simultaneously, a Transport Rehabilitation
Study was undertaken to identify short,
medium and long term needs of various
modes of transport in the Kingdom of
Cambodia, and to establish a Planning Unit
in the Ministry of Public Works. The project's
budget amounted $1.3 million with $719,400
from UNDP and a parallel financing from
Sweden through AsDB of $600,000. In addi-
tion, UNDP has provided advisory services
to the newly created Ministry of Public Works
and Transport (MPWT) for, inter alia, setting
technical standards and regulation for the
construction and operation of the infrastruc-
ture assets and, to assist the Ministry in its
coordination efforts.
UNDP/ICAO support (with UNDP funding
of $2.8 million) in the area of Air Traffic
Control Services has, apart from institutional
and capacity building support, contributed to
the establishment of regular safety standards
at Pochentong (Phnom Penh) International
Airport.
(b) Water and Power Utilities(/b)
UNDP and the World Bank are jointly sup-
porting capacity building and initial rehabilitation-
regarding the Water and the Power
Utilities of Phnom Penh and Sihanoukville.
This emergency assistance, with a total
UNDP contribution of $7.8 million, has paved
the way for major rehabilitation activities and
investments amounting to, so far, $109 mil-
lion for the power sector (World Bank, AsDB,
Japan, France, Ireland, Belgium) and $19 mil-
lion for the water sector (World Bank, Japan,
France).
(c) Telecommunications
UNDP facilitated the transfer of the $28 mil-
lion UNTAC satellite-based telecommunica-
tions network to -the Kingdom of Cambodia.
Furthermore, UNDP/ITU technical support
to the Ministry of Posts and
Telecommunications of Cambodia (MPTC)
has facilitated additional investment of $15
million that will generate an estimated $25
million of revenue over 8 years. In addition,
UNDP/ITU support, of in total $1 million, is
about to start for preparation of a 15 year
Telecommunications Master Plan, including
further support to strengthen the planning
and management capabilities of the MPRC.
ADDITIONAL AREAS OF UNDP SUPPORT
UTILIZATION OF KHMER EXPERTISE
Apart from human resources development,
UNDP is actively promoting the UTILIZATION of
Khmer expertise as part of all its support
activities. One of the modalities being used is
the TOKTEN programme (Transfer of
Knowledge Through Expatriate Nationals),
which aims at bringing highly qualified and
experienced expatriate technical and manage-
rial professionals back to their country of ori-
gin for short-term consultancies. In 1993 and
1994, a total of 106 such consultants complet-
ed assignments in Cambodia in the fields of
agriculture, health, culture, industry, educa-
tion, environment, public works, tourism,
administration and macro-economic -manage-
ment. A total of 980 Government officials and
1,100 teachers and students have benefitted
from training as a result of these missions.
The majority of TOKTEN consultants have
been drawn from France, the United States,
and Australia, and a total of 23 (or more than
20%) of these consultants have chosen to
remain in Cambodia over the long term.
DIALOGUE ON LONGER-TERM DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY
Building on earlier UNDP support, it is now
becoming possible to work towards a longer-
term framework for cooperation between the
Royal Government, the UN Development
System and its development partners. As part
of the UN Development System, UNDP will
continue to focus its dialogue with the Royal
Government on such longer-term develop-
ment perspective, and on the approaches that
need to be developed or enhanced.
REINTEGRATION OF CAMBODIA WITHIN THE WORLD COMMUNITY
UNDP System will continue its efforts to
facilitate Cambodia's re-integration in a
regional and world context. Concrete impetus
has been provided to the recent draft agree-
ment on the cooperation for sustainable
development of the Mekong River Basin.
Collaboration with regional institutions, like
ESCAP, has already been intensified and will
be further pursued. At the invitation of the
Japanese Government to a Forum for the
Comprehensive Development of Indochina,
UNDP has supported the preparation of a
Compendium on Human Resources
Development requirements in the region,
with a view to highlight priorities and strate-
gies for sub-regional cooperation. It is also
significant that Cambodia was represented at-
the International Conference on Population
and Development held in Cairo and the
World Social Summit that has just recently
been concluded in Copenhagen. UNDP will
also continue to promote and facilitate South-
South collaboration, at all levels of policy and
implementation support.