Cambodia Trust
Cambodia has one of the world’s largest disabled populations, including an estimated 43,000 landmine survivors and 50,000 people affected by polio.
In a country where the average income is less than 50p a day, disabled people are among the poorest of the poor. Discriminated against at every level of society, they are seen as ‘useless’; a burden on the family and the community.
Unable to participate in education and employment opportunities, many disabled men, women and children live as outcasts, begging on the streets for their survival. Denied their equal rights, they remain trapped in the cycle of poverty.
The Cambodia Trust offers a helping hand out of poverty, through practical projects such as physical rehabilitation, community work, capacity building and advocacy -...
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In a country where the average income is less than 50p a day, disabled people are among the poorest of the poor. Discriminated against at every level of society, they are seen as ‘useless’; a burden on the family and the community.
Unable to participate in education and employment opportunities, many disabled men, women and children live as outcasts, begging on the streets for their survival. Denied their equal rights, they remain trapped in the cycle of poverty.
The Cambodia Trust offers a helping hand out of poverty, through practical projects such as physical rehabilitation, community work, capacity building and advocacy -...
» More info
Soarim and Po
Saorim receives a visit from Po, a Cambodia Trust community development worker. Both Saorim and Po have been affected by polio. Saorim is a young client of the Cambodia Trust. She regularly...
3'01 | 5/5/08 | 164 View(s) | 0 Comments
Chea Doe, landmine survivor
Chea Doe is a farmer who lost a leg in a landmine accident. We met Doe while we were making a film about our work and he was subsequently taken to the Cambodia Trust rehabilitation centre in Kompong...
2'53 | 5/5/08 | 145 View(s) | 1 Comments





