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・ Colombo Hindu College
・ Colombo Hockey and Football Club
・ Colombo House, University of New South Wales
・ Colombo Institute of Research & Psychology
・ Colombo International Nautical and Engineering College
・ Colombo International School
・ Colombo Lake
・ Colombo Library
・ Colombo Lighthouse
・ Colombo Lions
・ Colombo Lotus Tower
・ Colombo Marathon
・ Colombo Monorail
・ Colombo Municipal Council
・ Colombo North Electoral District
Colombo Plan
・ Colombo Plan Staff College
・ Colombo Port City
・ Colombo Port Maritime Museum
・ Colombo Port Power Station
・ Colombo Post
・ Colombo Public Library
・ Colombo Quotes
・ Colombo Racecourse
・ Colombo Rowing Club
・ Colombo South Electoral District
・ Colombo South International College
・ Colombo Stock Exchange
・ Colombo Stock Exchange Sector indices
・ Colombo Street


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Colombo Plan : ウィキペディア英語版
Colombo Plan

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|admin_center_type = Headquarters
|admin_center =
|languages_type = Official languages
|languages = English
|leader_title1 = Secretary-General
|leader_name1 =
|established_event1 = Establishmenta
|established_date1 = 28 November 1950
|established_event2 = Commencement
|established_date2 = 1 July 1951
|official_website = http://www.colombo-plan.org/
|footnote_a = As the "Colombo Plan for Co-operative Economic Development in South and South-East Asia".
}}
The Colombo Plan is a regional organisation that embodies the concept of collective intergovernmental effort to strengthen economic and social development of member countries in the Asia-Pacific region. The primary focus of all Colombo Plan activities is on human resources development.
==History==

In the Spring 1949, the Indian Ambassador to China, Kavalam Madhava Panikkar, proposed a multilateral fund to the British and Australian ambassadors, in order to help the states of southeast Asia to battle communist movements in their countries. The United States was to be by far the largest contributor of aid to the organisation.
Formally, the organisation was born out of a Commonwealth Conference of Foreign Ministers, held in Colombo, Sri Lanka, in January 1950. At this meeting, a plan was established to provide a framework within which international cooperation efforts could be promoted to raise the standards of people in the region. Originally conceived as lasting for a period of six years, the Colombo Plan was extended several times until 1980, when it was extended indefinitely. Initially it was called the "Colombo Plan for Cooperative Economic Development in South and Southeast Asia". It has grown from a group of seven Commonwealth nations - Australia, Britain, Canada, Ceylon, India, New Zealand and Pakistan - into an international governmental organisation of 27, including non-Commonwealth countries. When it adopted a new constitution in 1977, its name was changed to "The Colombo Plan for Cooperative Economic and Social Development in Asia and the Pacific" to reflect the expanded composition of its enhanced membership and the scope of its activities.
In the early years, Colombo Plan assistance from developed to developing countries comprised both transfer of physical capital and technology as well as a strong component of skills development. Hence, while infrastructure by way of airports, roads, railways, dams, hospitals, plant fertiliser, cement factories, universities and steel mills were constructed in member countries through Colombo Plan assistance, a large number of people were simultaneously trained to manage such infrastructure and the growing economies.

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