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‘There are lives on line’ after aid cuts – International Rescue Committee chief

10 May 2025 4 minute read
Photo by EU Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 2.0.

Ellen Knickmeyer, Associated Press

Keeping millions of people alive in the most vulnerable countries will require pulling some assistance for programmes in better-off countries that target everything from climate change to refugee resettlement, the head of the International Rescue Committee (IRC) has said.

The comments from David Miliband come as the world’s humanitarian organisations are triaging their shrinking amount of funding.

Life-saving food, water and health programmes are already shutting down in countries including Sudan, where the closing of 80% of communal kitchens has ended the only access to food for millions.

That comes after the Trump administration dissolved the lead US aid agency and terminated thousands of foreign assistance programmes.

“There are lives on the line,” Mr Miliband, president of the IRC, told The Associated Press in an interview this week in Washington, where he was also speaking to legislators and Trump administration officials.

“Our point is there’s no way you can keep the aid system as it was,” the former UK foreign secretary said.

Humanitarian efforts

As it was, Mr Miliband noted, only 14% of total aid was going to humanitarian efforts, while middle-income countries got more funding than low-income ones.

The triage under way shows the impact of the Trump administration decision to pull the US back from being the world’s single largest aid donor.

The United States previously provided about a third of the more than 200 billion dollars (£150 billion) in foreign assistance given annually by governments worldwide.

The White House last week proposed a budget for next year with an 84% cut to such funding.

Other important European donors, including Britain, say they are also cutting aid as they work to free up more money for defence spending, fearing US changes in European defence commitments.

Mr Miliband and his International Rescue Committee are more explicit than some aid groups in offering their ideas for change in leaner funding times.

Redirected

Countries that are doing OK or are downright wealthy should have some of their donor funding redirected, so it can go to the range of needs of poor countries most affected by war and climate change.

“If you’re looking for a guideline, I would say at least half the global aid budget needs to go to conflict states,” Mr Miliband said.

That is up from about a quarter of total aid now.

Mr Miliband points to climate mitigation in wealthier countries and help for newly arrived refugees to settle in wealthier countries as programmes that should be lower priorities for donors in the current harsh aid environment.

With the dust settling from the Trump cuts, aid organisations are looking at how to reorganise to focus on the most vital and strategic aid, said Kate Phillips-Barrasso, a vice president of Mercy Corps, another top humanitarian organisation.

“My fear is that we’re going to end up in a world” where donors split their efforts between two poles: arranging financing for infrastructure and economic development in middle-income countries or paying for only the most basic aid “helping people not die” in poor countries, Ms Phillips-Barrasso said.

“I worry about pretty much everything in the middle disappearing,” she said.

That would leave the very poorest and most fragile countries never getting the help they need to get ahead of climate change and other threats.

Afghanistan

For Mr Miliband and the IRC, donors should focus on getting humanitarian aid, climate help and other vital assistance to 13 poor countries struggling the most with conflicts and environmental damage.

That includes Afghanistan, where the Trump administration has cut aid on the grounds that it could benefit the Taliban, and Yemen, where the US recently reached a ceasefire with Houthi militants, who have been targeting global shipping.

The other countries that the IRC identifies as priorities for the shrinking pool of aid funding are Haiti, Burkina Faso, the Central African Republic, Chad, Mali, Mozambique, Somalia, South Sudan and Sudan.

The Trump administration’s cuts have already forced top aid organisations to pull out of entire countries.

Groups say that endangers the progress many countries in Africa and elsewhere have made and threatens further destabilisation and extremist gains in volatile regions, including the southern edge of the Sahara.


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Christopher Wood, PhD, JD
Christopher Wood, PhD, JD
1 hour ago

Call me curious, but what salary is  David Miliband on?? I heard it was in excess of half a million pounds a year – is this true, and if it is…

Alain
Alain
9 minutes ago

I assume this is because they are not just delivering aid, they are trying to mobilise governments. Larry from accounts might be a great candidate for senior administrator but he’s not going to be able to hit the airwaves and embarrass world leaders into responding to disasters.

Christopher Wood, PhD, JD
Christopher Wood, PhD, JD
1 hour ago

I just looked it up; David Milliband’s salary is reported to be $1.2 million per year for what is essentially a charity position. This begs several obvious questions.

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