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Wednesday, February 12, 2025
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US aid freeze paralyzes NGOs working to help millions of displaced people in Somalia

publish time

12/02/2025

publish time

12/02/2025

KBI102
A Somali internally-displaced person (IDP) woman pushing a child in a wheelchair walks past makeshift homes in Maslah camp on the outskirts of Mogadishu, Somalia on Feb 5. (AP)

MOGADISHU, Somalia, Feb 12, (AP): In a desolate makeshift camp on the fringes of Somalia's capital, tens of thousands of internally displaced people sit under the baking sun not sure if they can have access to food rations and medication following US President Donald Trump's decree to freeze most of his country's foreign aid.

Trump’s decision, which will remain in force for 90 days following his Jan 20 executive order, threatens to collapse the humanitarian aid economy that sustains the livelihoods of some of the world’s most vulnerable people. The US provides more foreign aid globally than any other country, budgeting about $60 billion in 2023, or about 1% of the US budget.

Somalia, a Horn of Africa nation that struggles with a homegrown Islamic extremist insurgency, depends almost entirely on foreign aid to look after people displaced by armed conflict, amounting to 3 million, according to the UN refugee agency. The east African country also grapples with the effects of natural disasters, particularly drought, and food insecurity.

The United States Agency for International Development, or USAID, spent $369 million in Somalia in 2021, supporting everything from sanitation programs to emergency nutrition with funds channeled through government and non-governmental groups. Ayan Ali Hussein, chairwoman of the Dooxdoox IDP camp on the outskirts of Mogadishu, said Trump’s order provoked almost immediate stop-work orders addressed to USAID partners, shutting down basic services.

Suddenly "there are no facilities to treat malnourished children,” she said. "Women who had experienced gender-based violence once had access to care, counseling, protection, medication, financial support, and clothing, none of which are available anymore.” Hussein’s camp looks after eight sites, home to nearly 8,000 households of internally displaced Somalis who will "lack basic items like plastic sheets” for temporary shelter. The suspension of USAID, "left a huge void in our lives” she said. One of the camp's residents, an 85-year-old mother of eight, Ruqiya Abdulle Ubeyd, said she was shocked by Trump’s decision and asked "the US government to restore the aid it used to give to vulnerable people,” she said.