Australian foreign aid workers fear ‘deaths and suffering’ will result from Trump’s halt to USAid

Australian foreign aid workers fear ‘deaths and suffering’ will result from Trump’s halt to USAid
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Australian foreign aid workers fear ‘deaths and suffering’ will result from Trump’s halt to USAid
Author: Tory Shepherd
Published: Feb, 05 2025 14:00

The peak body for overseas aid organisations said without intervention, the consequences of the president’s decision ‘will be catastrophic’. Australian overseas aid programs could shut, causing “unnecessary deaths and suffering”, in the fallout from the Trump administration’s decision to freeze foreign aid. Workers have described “chaos” and “total panic” as they try to work out what the policy means. The peak body for overseas aid organisations said without intervention, the consequences of the move “will be catastrophic”.

 [Pallets loaded with boxes behind a C-17 aircraft with men in high-vis vests]
Image Credit: the Guardian [Pallets loaded with boxes behind a C-17 aircraft with men in high-vis vests]

The United States provides about US$68bn in foreign aid a year, more than 40% of global humanitarian funding. Most of it is managed by the US Agency for International Development (USAid). Sign up for Guardian Australia’s breaking news email. Under president Donald Trump’s orders – one of dozens he signed after being re-elected to the White House – the funding dried up for an initial period of 90 days, with some exceptions for emergency food aid, and military funding for Israel and Egypt.

 [People unloading large sacks of flour from a truck]
Image Credit: the Guardian [People unloading large sacks of flour from a truck]

USAid staff were issued “stop work” directives, and banned from discussing the situation without approval. Funded organisations were also ordered to stop work on all contracts, grants, agreements and programs. Elon Musk, who now runs the US government’s “department of government efficiency” (Doge), said the government was working to shut down USAid altogether with Trump’s approval. On Tuesday, the administration confirmed it would shrink USAid and merge it with the state department.

A range of Australian projects have USAid funding. Some organisations receive funds directly, while others work on projects that are jointly funded by the US and other partners and it is unclear what the stop work orders mean for them. There are concerns the US has left a chasm that could be filled by China. The Australian Council for International Development (Acfid) is the peak body for non-government organisations (NGOs) working in international development and humanitarian projects.

Acfid interim chief executive officer, Matthew Maury, said funding for climate crisis work, food, health, infrastructure and disaster programs were at risk. “This disruption will have wide-reaching impacts, interrupting critical life-saving work, including access to food for families, basic education for children, safety for women fleeing sexual and gender-based violence, and providing medications to children and others suffering from disease,” he said.

“Australian aid organisations with USAid-funded projects are at risk, as implementing partners rely on USAid funds for part of their operating costs. This could force organisations to shut down, with some already forced to let staff go.”. Maury said NGOs were “deeply concerned about how the immediate gaps will be addressed and the impact on communities that have relied on aid for essential services” including healthcare, education and basic necessities such as clean water.

“Without intervention, the consequences will be catastrophic. We are talking about unnecessary deaths and suffering. “Initial data suggests that over AUD$256m worth of programs delivered by Acfid members and partners globally will be impacted, with $119m of funding impacted in the Pacific alone. These are programs at risk of not continuing,” he said. Trump has ordered efficiency reviews be done on all US-backed programs.

He wrote in his executive order that the “foreign aid industry and bureaucracy are not aligned with American interests and in many cases antithetical to American values”. Last week, the administration granted a waiver for “life-saving humanitarian assistance” but it is not clear what that covers. Guardian Australia spoke to a range of organisations that declined to be named for fear of retaliation. Several major NGOs referred inquiries to their US headquarters.

The Australian International Development Network (Aidn) warns the policy threatens lives, and is meeting with US foundations to work out where the most urgent needs lie. Mark Cubit co-founded Aidn, which describes itself as a collaboration of private sector individuals, philanthropists, organisations, donors, businesses and government. Cubit confirmed people and organisations will not speak out for fear of losing funding altogether, but said Aidn does not rely on USAid funding.

Sign up to Breaking News Australia. Get the most important news as it breaks. after newsletter promotion. “Organisations who received a sudden communication that everything must stop are left dealing with the implications of that – initially having to tell their staff,” he said. “The second obvious effect is on the beneficiaries. “If it’s child literacy programs that’s unfortunate. If it’s the provision of tuberculosis medication it’s life threatening.”.

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