The math doesn’t add up for Kong Sothea, the patrol team chief of Or Boun Leu Community Protected Area in Cambodia.
“I am so worried because I don’t have money,” says Sothea. “I need to borrow money from the bank, which I have never done before COVID-19 occurred.”
Before the pandemic, Kong could sell cattle to buyers in bordering Viet Nam when he needed money. But now, with the border between Cambodia and Viet Nam closed, Kong can’t sell his cattle, and has no money to grow rice.
Closed borders have hurt the livelihoods of many people like Kong who live in and near forests. Governments in the Mekong region are taking a cautious approach to lifting movement restrictions. For forest communities, the economic hardship caused by COVID-19 is making the health crisis even more acute. It has also changed how they manage and protect their forests.
To ease the hardship and help protect forest communities from COVID-19, the Voices for Mekong Forests (V4MF) project, funded by the European Union (EU), sent more than 40,000 items of personal protective equipment or PPE to villages in Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar and Thailand. The supplies included face masks, hand gel, thermometers and informational posters in local languages. Kong is one of the villagers who received the supplies from RECOFTC.