After chaos of US cuts, aid chiefs urge world leaders at UN to step up

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United Nations' Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator at the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) Tom Fletcher speaks during an interview at U.N. headquarters, in New York City, U.S., September 18, 2025. REUTERS/Jeenah Moon

UN aid chief Tom Fletcher said humanitarians could not afford to wait for the US to restore funding.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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UN aid chief Tom Fletcher hopes the world body will fight back against a “sustained attack” on its values and finances next week at an annual gathering of world leaders, and said humanitarians could not afford to wait for the US to restore funding.

Aid worker killings

rose by nearly a third

to almost 400 in 2024, which was the most deadly year since records began in 1997, according to UN data.

Then, in January, US President Donald Trump returned to power and slashed US foreign aid, sparking global humanitarian chaos.

“It has been a really rough year,” Mr Fletcher told Reuters in an interview on Sept 18, adding that the UN should show world leaders how it can save lives and work to end conflicts.

“We reckon that the support is out there. I don’t think there is less support for kindness, compassion, global solidarity than there was just because of the results of a few elections.”

He remains hopeful that Washington, which was the world’s biggest humanitarian aid donor, could be convinced to restore and continue some funding, but said, “in the meantime, we can’t wait”.

The Trump administration has cut billions of dollars in foreign aid that it believed was not aligned with its “America First” foreign policy.

Mr Trump has also said the US pays disproportionately for foreign aid and wants other countries to shoulder more of the burden.

Small price

Mr David Miliband, head of the International Rescue Committee (IRC) aid group, said more than two million people had lost services – such as education in Afghanistan and healthcare for Sudanese refugees – after the US cut more than three-quarters of IRC’s grants and contracts.

“We have a very clear agenda that says to the US government: We can respect your determination to achieve reform. We can respect your determination to achieve value for money. Let’s work together to make sure that, for a very small size of American income, we’re able to do outsize good in the world,” he told Reuters in an interview on Sept 18

Mr Miliband added that Europe was going to step up to help fill the gap left by US cuts, but others needed to do so as well. “We haven’t seen that yet,” he said.

The annual gathering of world leaders in New York next week will be more important than usual, Mr Miliband said, with China pitting itself as the future of the multilateral system, while the US takes an America-first approach. 

“There’s a void to be filled,” Mr Miliband said.

“I think that while, for Americans, the UN can seem like bureaucracy or traffic jams in New York, for the rest of the world, they’re looking for leadership and that’s what we’re calling for next week.” REUTERS

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