MANILA, Philippines, March 16 (UPI) -- Cambodia will get international aid to preserve Southeast Asia's largest freshwater lake.
While financial details have yet to be unveiled, the Asian Development Bank said Friday it will provide support to clean up the Tonle Sap Great Lake, which will not only help the environment, but also help the area's poor.
Over one million people owe their livelihood to the lake and its ecosystem, the ADB said. As such, the bank argued that it will be critical to hold discussions on how to go about protecting the lake on the one hand, and allow people to benefit from those policies on the other.
"There is a risk that some of the poor and marginalized could be increasingly left behind," said Urooj Malik, director of the agriculture, environment and natural resources division at the bank's Southeast Asia department. "It is vital to involve them more in the process of formulating policies designed to improve their conditions."
While financial details have yet to be unveiled, the Asian Development Bank said Friday it will provide support to clean up the Tonle Sap Great Lake, which will not only help the environment, but also help the area's poor.
Over one million people owe their livelihood to the lake and its ecosystem, the ADB said. As such, the bank argued that it will be critical to hold discussions on how to go about protecting the lake on the one hand, and allow people to benefit from those policies on the other.
"There is a risk that some of the poor and marginalized could be increasingly left behind," said Urooj Malik, director of the agriculture, environment and natural resources division at the bank's Southeast Asia department. "It is vital to involve them more in the process of formulating policies designed to improve their conditions."