Education Conference

This is a conference on inclusive education for children with disabilities sponsored by the NGO Education Program.  It brought together this past week a lot of civil society and non-government organizations to look at the situation in Cambodia.

It looks like a normal organization meeting in any hotel in any major city anywhere, but this one had its Cambodian characteristics.  Cambodians thrive on noise–loud noise–and they always turn the PA systems up very high–and leave them at that setting.  Their technicians do not adjust the volume for each speaker as he or she comes to the podium.  The volume stays on high all the time.  And then speakers come up and yell into the microphones.  If we were in the United States, OSHA would require ear protection for everyone in the room.  Here the locals just consider it normal—and it is in this culture.  We foreigners consider it painful.

Not yet….

Electricity is still not a given in Cambodia.  I think now the percentage of the population with access to electricity is about 34% and where it is available, it is quite expensive.

Cambodia is now buying more electricity from Vietnam and the supply is more reliable.  Previously because the grid was so weak and the price so high, air conditioning was a luxury and was never part of the original design of a building.  Now it is still a luxury but more and more people feel they can afford it so external air con units are appearing in more and more places.  Here fifteen of them have been added to the top floor of a residential block.  Individual units are now not such a rarity but it will still be a while before architects think of central air conditioning for a building here.

A Day’s Wages #2

A couple days ago we had a photo of a woman with a scale she carried around, weighing people for a few cents each.  Not far above her on the economic scale is this woman with a stack of khramas (scarves) and other cloths that she is selling.  She probably pays a deposit for the cloths in the morning (and maybe rents the bicycle along with them) and then walks all day to sell a few items.  Will she make two, three, four dollars in  day?  How much of that can she keep?

A Day’s Wages

Cambodia is trying to get its economic ranking raised from low-income country to middle-income country, and by some standards, progress is being made.  But then you see people like this woman.  She rents a scale and then walks the streets all day hoping to weigh people who may give her 3¢ to 5¢ for the weighing.  Here she is counting her money.  Will she have enough to buy food at the end of the day?

Year-round Treat

All kinds of food are sold on the street in Cambodia.  Some of it is seasonal, but one offering that is available almost any time is the roasted bananas.  Three or four on a skewer stick, they are grilled on a cart going around the city and eaten warm, a real favorite.  Here this man is also roasting some kind of round cake but I don’t know what that is.  Maybe it’s some kind of mashed-banana cake?