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Lower Mekong Initiative

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Fact Sheet
Office of the Spokesperson
Washington, DC
July 13, 2012


The Lower Mekong Initiative (LMI) is a multinational effort initiated by U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton in 2009 to foster integrated sub-regional cooperation and capacity building among Cambodia, Laos, Thailand, and Vietnam, in the areas of education, health, environment, and connectivity. Burma formally joined the initiative in July 2012.
The United States intends to commit substantial resources to LMI over the next three years through the Asia Pacific Security Engagement Initiative (APSEI). APSEI is a new integrated framework that engages on current pressing bilateral and transnational issues, and positions the United States and its partners to sustain regional stability and support an inclusive regional economy in our shared future.
Specifically, new programs—under the banner “LMI 2020” to signal the lasting nature of U.S. engagement in the Lower Mekong region—will complement and dramatically expand existing efforts to bolster regional capacity to combat cross-border challenges and promote sub-regional institutional and people-to-people connectivity.
As a demonstration of U.S. commitment to APSEI and the broader Asia-Pacific region, the United States will provide $50 million over three years to support a substantial expansion of LMI in new programming and activities aimed at strengthening regional capacity to address transnational issues of significant interest to the Lower Mekong region.
In addition to the new APSEI-related programs, during 2011-2012, the United States, in close cooperation with LMI partner countries, has launched the following activities under the environment, health, education, and connectivity pillars:
ENVIRONMENT
HEALTH
CONNECTIVITY
EDUCATION



PRN: 2012/1155

[This is a mobile copy of Lower Mekong Initiative]