
US to give $30m to group accused of ‘politicizing' food distribution in Gaza
The Trump administration has authorised a $30m grant to the controversial Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, making the US a direct backer of an aid organisation that is closely linked to private security contractors and has been accused by critics of 'politicising' the distribution of humanitarian aid in Gaza.
According to a document seen by the Guardian, the state department has already disbursed $7m to GHF, a US and Israeli-backed aid organisation that has been given preferential access to operate in Gaza because it says that it can deliver millions of meals to starving Gazans without that food falling into the hands of Hamas.
But its rollout has been chaotic, with hundreds killed near distribution centres policed by private military contractors and Israeli soldiers, resignations by senior leadership who have said the humanitarian organisation's mission was 'politicised', and reports of close ties and collaboration with the the Israeli government.
Insiders said that the application for the grant was rushed through the state department unusually quickly, especially for a first time applicant that should undergo an audit in order to receive USAID funding.
'It was pushed through over the technical and ethical objections of career staff,' a source told the Guardian.
The state department decision to issue the grant was first reported by Reuters.
The state department refused to confirm or deny the reports. 'We are not going to comment on internal deliberations,' a state department spokesperson told the Guardian. 'We are constantly looking for creative solutions to get aid into Gaza without it being looted by Hamas and GHF stepped up.'
Sources told Reuters that GHF may be given $30m each month to help fund its operating costs in Gaza. The grants appeared to be rushed through USAID, which is in the process of being rolled into the state department in a major shakeup of US aid disbursement abroad.
In a letter sent on Monday to GHF and the affiliated Safe Reach Solutions and UG Solutions, rights advocates from fifteen international human rights organisations warned that private contractors operating in Gaza in collaboration with the Israeli government risk 'aiding and abetting or otherwise being complicit in crimes under international law, including war crimes, crimes against humanity, or genocide'.
Top Democrats have also criticised GHF. In a letter to Secretary of State Marco Rubio obtained by the Guardian, the Massachusetts senator Elizabeth Warren said that support for GHF 'marks an alarming departure from the professional humanitarian organizations that have worked on the ground, in Gaza and elsewhere, for decades'.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Telegraph
9 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Dark horse socialist Zohran Mamdani wins New York Democratic mayoral primary
New York City Democrats chose 33-year-old Muslim socialist Zohran Mamdani as their mayoral candidate in Tuesday's elections, shocking his opponent, former New York governor Andrew Cuomo. In what appears to be the Left-leaning city's rebuke of the Democratic party's veteran moderates - and New York's rarely claimed native son, Donald Trump - Mr Mamdani led with 43 per cent of the vote with 95 per cent of ballots counted, city officials reported. Mr Mamdani declared victory in a speech to supporters shortly after Mr Cuomo conceded defeat on Tuesday night. 'Tonight, we made history,' Mr Mamdani said. 'I will be your Democratic nominee for the mayor of New York City.' Mr Cuomo, a political veteran who was vying to come back from a sexual harassment scandal, told supporters at an election night party: 'Tonight was not our night.' 'I called him, I congratulated won,' he said. The party's primary contest featured almost a dozen candidates seeking to become mayor of the biggest US city, where registered Democrats outnumber Republicans three to one. Voters cast ballots during a smothering heatwave before polls closed at 9pm (1am GMT Wednesday), but results may take time to finalise. The contest is ranked-choice, with voters asked to select five candidates in order of preference, and neither Mr Cuomo nor Mr Mamdani claimed the required majority on Tuesday. If no candidate wins 50 per cent of the vote, election officials begin eliminating lowest-ranking candidates and recounting, a process that can take days. With the Democrats reeling nationally from Mr Trump's presidential election last year, the high-profile city race has done little to calm party nerves. But Mr Mamdani's upbeat campaign, built with youthful social media savvy and campaign promises to improve the city's affordability, appears to have resonated with voters. Mr Cuomo stepped down as New York governor four years ago after multiple women accused him of sexual harassment. He has also been accused of mismanaging the state's response to the Covid pandemic. Staunchly pro-Israel, Mr Cuomo led in polls for most of the race, with massive name recognition as the son of another New York governor, as well as support from powerful centrist figures including former president Bill Clinton. Mr Mamdani, meanwhile, is backed by the Democratic Socialists of America - the kind of niche, leftist affiliation that might work in New York, but many analysts say the Democratic Party needs to discard to come back from the broader political wilderness. 'I see it as a referendum of the Democratic Party, whether we lean more towards the centrist candidate, who's maybe from a different generation of politicians and people in society, or a younger, Left-leaning, more ambitious, idealistic party,' voter Nicholas Zantal, 31, said. The fact that Mr Mamdani speaks out for Palestinians and has accused Israel of 'genocide' also makes him a prime target for Mr Trump. His supporters include two other favourite Trump foils - fiery leftist Senator Bernie Sanders and progressive congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez.


Sky News
9 minutes ago
- Sky News
Why did Trump drop the F-bomb?
Donald Trump has lashed out at both Israel and Iran - clearly frustrated after both sides exchanged missiles despite a ceasefire being declared. For now though, a cessation of hostilities has held, with Israel saying its operation is now over. The US president is now in The Netherlands for the NATO summit, and received a gushing text from Secretary-General Mark Rutte while en route. US Correspondents James Matthews and Mark Stone discuss the latest. If you've got a question you'd like the Trump100 team to answer, you can email it to trump100@ You can also watch all episodes on our YouTube channel.


The Guardian
24 minutes ago
- The Guardian
‘On to victory': supporters overjoyed as Zohran Mamdani defeats Andrew Cuomo in New York primary
After news exploded across social media and beyond that Zohran Mamdani, the 33-year-old democratic socialist who would become New York's first Muslim mayor if elected, was on track to win the city's Democratic primary on Tuesday night, reactions from supporters poured in to offer their well-wishes and thoughts. While it could still be several days before the final result is known, Mamdani nabbed more than 43.5% of the vote with 92% of the votes counted while his biggest competitor, Andrew Cuomo, the former New York governor and previous favorite, was at 36.4% Mamdani declared victory late on Tuesday, telling supporters 'I will be your Democratic nominee for the mayor of New York City.' Evoking the fervor and awe of representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's 2018 win against longtime Democratic incumbent Joseph Crowley of New York, Mamdani stands poised to make history in more ways than one. 'This is the biggest upset in modern New York City history,' Trip Yang, a Democratic consultant, told the New York Times. In contrast, Ocasio-Cortez heartily congratulated Mamdani on X, formerly Twitter, on Tuesday night. 'Your dedication to an affordable, welcoming, and safe New York City where working families can have a shot has inspired people across the city. Billionaires and lobbyists poured millions against you and our public finance system. And you won,' she wrote. Cynthia Nixon, who was seen at Mamdani's election night party, simply wrote: 'Zohran Mamdani, a Muslim democratic socialist has won the NYC primary for Mayor!!!!!!' Fellow democratic socialist and senator Bernie Sanders also wished Mamdani well and congratulated 'his thousands of grassroots supporters for their extraordinary campaign. You took on the political, economic and media Establishment- and you beat them. Now it's on to victory in the general election.' Brad Lander, one of Mamdani and Cuomo's competitors and New York City's comptroller, notably cross-endorsed Mamdani earlier this month in a now-viral, upbeat joint campaign to rank one another; Lander's post about Mamdani leading echoed that initial message: 'Hope and solidarity won tonight, and will win again in November.' Attendees of Mamdani's election night party also proved effusive and were heard singing lyrics to 'Na Na Hey Hey Kiss Him Goodbye' as Cuomo's concession speech repeated on a screen.