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Crucial aid sits in warehouses worldwide as USAID employees are told to stop working

Though humanitarian aid was supposed to be exempt from the Trump-ordered disruption, shipments of lifesaving food and drugs are held up around the globe.

Feb. 4, 2025, 3:09 PM PST / Updated Feb. 5, 2025, 7:06 AM PST
By Suzy Khimm

Shipping containers packed with lifesaving antibiotics and antimalarial drugs are being held at the Port of Sudan, where they sit in limbo. Essential medicines are expiring in the Democratic Republic of the Congo after a cash-strapped government contractor was forced to shut off the air conditioning. Millions of pounds of American-grown soybeans that were bound for refugee camps overseas are being diverted to warehouses instead.

President Donald Trump’s mission to upend the U.S. Agency for International Development, a government organization tasked with alleviating global poverty and providing humanitarian relief, has paralyzed efforts to distribute essential food, medicine and other lifesaving supplies around the world, according to nonprofit organizations, farm industry groups and federal lawmakers.

The administration’s 90-day freeze on foreign aid, a stop-work order to review agency operations and the abrupt closure of USAID’s headquarters have stalled the aid distribution system, despite the administration’s claim that “life-saving humanitarian assistance” would be allowed to continue.

USAID announced on its website late Tuesday that almost all direct hires around the world will be placed on administrative leave later this week, with the exception of designated personnel responsible for mission-critical functions, core leadership and specially designated programs. Those expected to keep working will be notified by 3 p.m. Thursday.

The workforce totals more than 10,000 direct hires and a type of contractor known as personal services contractors, according to federal data. Around two-thirds of staff work overseas.

USAID delivers billions of dollars in humanitarian aid, funding that advocates say provides a critical lifeline to more than 100 countries at only a small fraction of the overall federal budget. It’s not clear how much money in aid is tied up, or how long the pause may last.

The agency’s future is now deeply uncertain; Trump has seized on it as part of his push to radically reshape the federal government, saying it was “run by a bunch of radical lunatics,” and the agency’s spending and staff must be scrutinized. The State Department took control of USAID this week.

Even amid the chaos, there was supposed to be a way to get aid through, but there are layers of problems. The process to apply for a humanitarian waiver is new and mired in confusion and delays. According to nonprofit groups, it’s not clear how the administration is defining “lifesaving” aid that can continue despite the freeze, or whether the holdups in releasing funds are intentional.

“For more than a week now, essential lifesaving programs and commodities like food and medicine have been stopped,” said Tom Hart, president and CEO of InterAction, an alliance of U.S.-based nongovernmental organizations, many of which rely on federal aid to fund their work. “That’s a massive waste of taxpayer money and goodwill, as well as devastating humanitarian impacts on people in need.”

Even aid groups that have received the waivers to distribute lifesaving HIV medication have been unable to draw down funding from the federal government’s payment system, hampering their ability to distribute the medicine, he said.

Some shipping containers full of aid materials already en route to their destinations are being diverted to warehouses and held at ports in the U.S. and overseas, caught up in the confusion, according to farm industry groups.

That includes about 33,000 metric tons of soybeans and soy products used to treat severe malnutrition in East Africa and other regions, according to Gena Perry, who leads a human health program for the American Soybean Association, an industry trade group.

“There’s a carveout for emergency feeding, so that’s supposed to be flowing through, yeah?” said Joe Cramer, director of the Michigan Bean Commission, which represents domestic bean growers. But he said that hasn’t been happening. “There’s a freeze on shipping anything,” he said.

The confusion around delivering essential food and medicine has drawn rare criticism from Republican lawmakers, as well as Democrats.

“I urge @SecRubio to distribute the $340 million in American-grown food currently stalled in U.S. ports to reach those in need,” Sen. Jerry Moran, R-Kan., wrote on X. “Time is running out before this life-saving aid perishes.”

Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., urged the Trump administration to resume the distribution of HIV drugs under a decades old initiative to fight HIV/AIDS.

“It is a Republican initiative, it is pro-life, pro-America and the most popular U.S. program in Africa,” Cassidy wrote on X. “There’s even a waiver acknowledging this, yet I’m told that drugs are still being held at clinics in Africa. This must be reversed immediately!!”

The State Department did not respond to a request for comment. Spokespeople for Moran and Cassidy said there were no updates.

The breakneck effort to stymie USAID has prompted many humanitarian groups to suspend their work entirely. Others have scaled back services while struggling to stay financially solvent as USAID has stopped payments — including those for services already rendered.

A senior leader of one humanitarian organization said their group was owed nearly $50 million from USAID for work completed in December and January.

“We have essential medicines rotting in warehouses in the DRC because we can’t operate the air conditioning,” said the staff member, who spoke on condition of anonymity over fears of retribution. “We can’t continue to front money.”

The group also said it had $500,000 worth of antibiotics, antimalarial drugs and other essential medicines currently stuck at the Port of Sudan because of the Trump administration’s stop-work order.

Hart, the CEO of InterAction, corroborated the group’s account.

Kaleb Brownlow, a former senior USAID adviser, said there could be serious health implications from suddenly stopping medication like HIV antiretrovirals, including higher viral loads and the development of drug resistance.

“There’s more viral particles circulating your body, which causes an impact to your own self, but also means that you can spread the disease and increase the likelihood of transmission,” said Brownlow, who was among the hundreds of USAID workers who were laid off last week.

Brownlow described his final days of work as a “complete scramble” as colleagues tried to redirect HIV, malaria and tuberculosis medication to warehouses around the globe.

“There was no attempt to actually phase this out — this was just a complete abandonment,” said Brownlow.
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Avectoijesuismoi · 31-35
View it from this angle
These are cold and hard business type decisions aimed at cutting government expenditure the same that would be taken to cut expenditure in a business

The problem that faces most governments is a simple one
They simply do not collect enough revenue from with the country from the taxpayers to finance running their own countries let alone giving aid of any sort to other countries
They therefore borrow money from various sources to make up the shortfall in the revenue they need to

Firstly have enough money to fund their own countries needs whatever these are
Secondly the money they give to finance aid to others

The problem is the more you borrow the more and more expensive it becomes. (Guess who picks up the bill the taxpayers so now you are further eroding what you are collecting to pay back debt because you already had a shortfall to start with).

Eventually you no matter which country you are will reach the point where either no one will lend you anymore money or secondly get to the point where you simply are unable to service and payback those loans) both have some very serious fallouts that are going to result from them.
Northwest · M
@Avectoijesuismoi
DOGE love it or hate it is simply another name for Auditors/a sort of Business Rescue Plan there function is purely aimed at reducing the Bottomline expenditure, it would be the same if they were going through a Big Corporate Company, they look at it purely as numbers coming in and numbers going out, there is absolutely no viewing for any other angle as to what it will cost humans in suffering etc.

Which is one of the things that Mr Trump was very big on during his campaign how he was going to make the Federal Government leaner and cost the America taxpayer less than it currently does.

Whether you and I agree or not as to whether it should be continued to be funded or not is really quite immaterial there is only one person's opinion that really matters that is Mr Trump, the American people put him there and empowered him to make these type of decisions.

As I understand it Mr Trump has not completely terminated USAID but suspended it for 90 days so that it can be reviewed as to where and how the aid goes to and bottom line how all the money $$$ is being spent.

There are two possibilities
1. He decides that some or all of the $$$ are wasteful and he is not willing to continue to or can even afford to continue the program
2. He uses the USAID as leverage or tactic a sort of (Terms and Conditions) to get countries to give him what he wants or to achieve certain desired behaviors from them.
(I can see this tactic being used to get Egypt and Jordan to take the Palestinians as an example to continue getting there part of the aid).

Did you tell ChaGpt to give you a few hundred word word salad?

Do you actually have a clue what this word salad means? You still don't have a clue and stop pretending you're American. You're not.
Avectoijesuismoi · 31-35
@Northwest Where did I say that I was American

All I said was American people gave Mr Trump the power to make these type of decisions
Northwest · M
@Avectoijesuismoi
All I said was American people gave Mr Trump the power to make these type of decisions

The American people did not give him the power to make these decisions. They made him President, and what he's doing now is illegal.
JustNik · 51-55, F
Ah yes. All that Christianity in action.
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Northwest · M
@Punches Who knows. God seems to be one heartless, mean MoFo.
Punches · 46-50, F
@Northwest You are correct. HOWEVER, it could be argued that the biggest sin any mortal OR immortal could commit is trying to place himself above God. We know trump does this.
FreddieUK · 70-79, M
Be fair. It takes a while for Trump to work out how he can make money for himself out of helping poor people.
Crazywaterspring · 61-69, M
trump and President Musk are making the US into a failed pariah state.
DonaldTrumpet · 70-79, M
RicEZ is OvERratEDz HuNz
trollslayer · 46-50, M
Trump’s mission of hate, spite, and bigotry continues.
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Northwest · M
@Punches
The one called BizSuit, I need to block it or have it block me but I kind of want to go out with a bang. I like to aggravate certain ones into blocking ME.

Ironically, if this dummy is working for a government funded organization, or in the Musk, Bazos, Zuckeberg orbit, he will be looking for another job soon, what with the crossdressing and all.
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