Clear Path International

Clear Path International (CPI) is a non-profit organization based in the United States. The organization assists civilian victims of war in post-conflict zones. This assistance takes the form of direct medical and social services to survivors and their families as well as equipment support to hospitals. Clear Path International's projects are in Vietnam, Cambodia and on the border of Myanmar and Thailand.

In the year 2000 Clear Path began working to remove unexploded ordnance in Quang Tri Province, Vietnam which was, at the time, the largest unexploded ordnance removal effort by an NGO in Vietnam's history.

In 2001 CPI established a vocational skills training program for landmine survivors in Kampong Cham, Cambodia.

Specializing in victim assistance
In 2002, CPI dropped ordnance removal from its mission and narrowed its scope of work to assisting civilian victims of landmines and other explosive remnants of war.

In the same year, CPI began supporting clinics on the Thai-Myanmar border that serve ethnic minority refugees escaping Myanmar's oppressive regime. CPI supports prosthetic clinics that serve landmine victims that have been injured in their escape. To further enhance border-area prostheses production and delivery, Clear Path is introducing a new portable device that will make it easier for landmine amputees in the remote jungles to get prostheses without traveling to a clinic or production site.

Clear Path International has received support from Adopt-a-Minefield, The McKnight Foundation, The Freeman Foundation, The United States Department of State Office of Weapons Removal and Abatement, The Open Society Institute, Johnson & Widdifield Charitable Trust, Susila Dharma USA, and a wide range of grass roots support.