logo
'People are going to die': USAID cuts create panic in Africa

'People are going to die': USAID cuts create panic in Africa

Khaleej Times05-02-2025

President Donald Trump's decision to freeze foreign assistance has sent aid staff in Africa into "panic mode", with even HIV experimental treatment programmes stopped dead in their tracks.
Trump last week ordered a suspension of foreign assistance, while his billionaire ally Elon Musk has boasted he is putting the vast US humanitarian agency USAID "through the woodchipper".
That has included a 90-day suspension of all work by the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR), which alone supports more than 20 million HIV patients and 270,000 health workers, according to an analysis from the Foundation for AIDS Research (amfAR).
Among its programmes, PEPFAR currently provides anti-retroviral treatments to 679,936 pregnant women living with HIV both for their own health and to prevent transmission to their children, the analysis said.
"During a 90-day stoppage, we estimate that this would mean 135,987 babies acquiring HIV," it said.
US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, who has been named acting head of USAID, has said "life-saving treatments" would be exempt from the freeze.
But frontline workers in Africa say facilities have already shut down.
"As we speak nothing is going on," said Aghan Daniel, head of a USAID-funded team of Kenyan science journalists providing information on health issues.
He told AFP research projects had abruptly stopped, even for patients midway through experimental treatment programmes.
He highlighted the MOSAIC (Maximising Options to Advance Informed Choice for HIV Prevention) project, funded under PEPFAR, which tests new drugs and vaccines.
"The people who were the study candidates are going to have adverse health results because the study has just stopped all of a sudden," Daniel told AFP.
His own team of six science journalists have all lost their jobs, too.
"A lot of people are going to die because of lack of knowledge," he said. "One of the key approaches to bringing down HIV numbers in Africa is through provision of information. This includes raising awareness about sex, as well as treatments like lenacapavir (an antiretroviral), pre- and post-exposure prophylaxis and other drugs."
Founded in 1961, USAID has an annual budget of more than $40 billion, used to support development, health and humanitarian programmes around the world, especially in poor countries.
It is not just HIV programmes that have shuttered.
A staff member of a USAID-funded programme in Kenya said Trump's decision had landed "like a bombshell", throwing people "into panic mode".
"We will have more people succumbing to these diseases like tuberculosis, cholera," the source said.
The charity itself is now unable to pay rent or salaries, with employees put on compulsory unpaid leave.
At a USAID office in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, AFP saw people clearing out their desks on Wednesday.
Despite Rubio's waiver, "a lot of uncertainty remains," said a staff member at an NGO working on food security in conflict zones, who asked to remain anonymous.
"What constitutes life-saving work? Are vaccines life-saving, or nutrition programmes for the severely malnourished?" he said.
"Stopping some of these programmes even for a few days could make the difference between life and death for some of the people we serve," he said.
Like others, Daniel said the impact could have been tempered with adequate notice.
"We have too many emergencies in the world — we didn't need to add another one," he said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Centcom has given range of options to Trump on use of military force against Iran, Kurilla says
Centcom has given range of options to Trump on use of military force against Iran, Kurilla says

The National

timean hour ago

  • The National

Centcom has given range of options to Trump on use of military force against Iran, Kurilla says

The head of US Central Command said on Tuesday that he has provided US President Donald Trump with options that could be used against Iran if Tehran and Washington fail to reach a new nuclear deal. The US and Iran are in continuing discussions over a new deal that would put limits on Tehran's nuclear programme in exchange for sanctions relief. The talks are expected to continue this week. 'I have provided the Secretary of Defence and the President a wide range of options,' Gen Michael Kurilla told a House Armed Services Committee hearing. Asked if the US Central Command, the military command responsible for promoting and defending US interests in the Middle East, was prepared to respond with 'overwhelming force' to prevent Iran from building a nuclear weapon, Gen Kurilla responded 'yes'. He added later that he was 'in all favour of having a negotiated settlement that prevents Iran from getting a nuclear weapon because of the consequences of conflict'. His comments come amid reports that Israel was finalising plans to strike nuclear sites in the country – a threat Israel has been making for months. Last month, Mr Trump said that he had warned Israel against such a move. 'I think it would increase risk to our forces in the region,' Gen Kurilla said of a potential Israeli attack. Gen Kurilla, in his final appearance before Congress ahead of leaving his post this month, also criticised Iran for continuing to arm Yemen's Houthis. 'Right now that the Iranian proxies are at one of the weakest levels they've been, with the decimation, of the disintegration of Hezbollah Hamas. However, the Houthis, the biggest challenge with the Houthis is they are being provided with Iranian weapons,' Gen Kurilla said. Gen Kurilla said that Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps experts were in the country to help the Houthis assemble and learn to use the weapons. The 'vast majority' of weapons are coming into the country on 'stateless dhows' or on container ships heading to Djibouti, where the UN has a mechanism in place to inspects 'So this is going to be a challenge going forward. We have got to stop the flow of the weapons into Yemen.' On Gaza, Gen Kurilla said the US military was not actively engaged in aid delivery and distribution in the war-ravaged enclave. 'Israel has contracted an American company that is doing the distribution inside of Gaza. Hamas hates that, because Hamas no longer has control over that distribution,' he said. The US and Israel have claimed that Hamas has been hijacking aid meant for Palestinians in Gaza. After Israel enacted an aid blockade of the enclave following the collapse of a ceasefire in March, the US announced the foundation of the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which would be responsible for delivering assistance. The UN and other aid organisations have been sidelined by the US-backed project, which has been plagued by violence at its distribution sites that local authorities have blamed on Israeli troops.

Donald Trump defends sending US Marines to Los Angeles as immigration protests continue
Donald Trump defends sending US Marines to Los Angeles as immigration protests continue

The National

time2 hours ago

  • The National

Donald Trump defends sending US Marines to Los Angeles as immigration protests continue

US President Donald Trump has defended his decision to post National Guard and US Marines to Los Angeles, as protests against immigration raids continued. The Pentagon is sending about 700 active-duty US Marines and about 4,000 members of the National Guard in response to the protests. 'If I didn't 'send in the troops' to Los Angeles the last three nights, that once beautiful and great City would be burning to the ground right now, much like 25,000 houses burned to the ground in LA due to an incompetent Governor and Mayor,' Mr Trump said in a post on Truth Social, referring to a highly destructive wildfire that hit the city earlier this year. A defence official told Bloomberg on Monday that the Marines are based in Twentynine Palms, California. The estimated cost for the posting is about $134 million, a senior Pentagon official said on Tuesday. 'This isn't about public safety. It's about stroking a dangerous President's ego,' California's Governor Gavin Newsom said about the decision. 'This is reckless. Pointless. And disrespectful to our troops.' Mr Newsom added later that the purpose of the US Marines is defending democracy. 'They are not political pawns.' He said that the soldiers had been illegally posted to California 'so Trump can have a talking point at his parade this weekend'. Washington will host a large military parade on Saturday to mark the US Army's 250th anniversary. It is also Mr Trump's 79th birthday. The California Governor and Mr Trump have exchanged insults over the past few days, with Mr Newsom saying Mr Trump was acting like a 'dictator' and Mr Trump saying he would arrest Mr Newsom, if he were border chief Tom Homan. California Democratic Representative John Garamendi told CNN that Mr Trump's response to the protests is 'about Trump pretending that he is the king of this nation, that he has the ultimate power and authority to do anything he wants to do'. While the original protest was peaceful, law enforcement responded after demonstrators blocked vehicles in an attempt to stop agents from removing people who had been detained in the raids. Protests intensified on Sunday, as demonstrators blocked a major motorway, throwing rocks, electric scooters and other items on to police vehicles. Several self-driving Waymo cars were set on fire. There have been reports of looting and vandalism in the city. Businesses reported graffiti and broken windows, as well as looted shelves. Police have been firing rubber bullets and flash-bangs into the crowd as they clashed with demonstrators. Scores of protesters have been arrested, in addition to those detained on immigration offences, and at least five police officers injured, according to KTLA 5. Solidarity protests have taken place in cities across the US, in Santa Ana and San Francisco in California, as well as New York, Atlanta and Dallas. Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass said the protests have begun to decrease in intensity. She blamed the federal government for aggravating the situation by sending in the National Guard and the Marines. 'I think we are an experiment, I think we are a test case for what happens if the federal government decides to take power from a governor and take over a city I think we are the laboratory rats right now for the administration,' she said. 'Stop the raids,' Ms Bass said in a post on X. 'We are a city of immigrants. Washington is attacking our people, our neighbourhoods and our economy. The Trump administration has made cutting down on illegal immigration a cornerstone of its domestic policy, with Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents carrying out an increased number of raids in cities across the country.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store