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To keep millions alive after aid cuts, pull climate and other funding in richer nations, group says

WASHINGTON (AP) — As the world’s humanitarian organizations are triaging their shrinking amount of funding, the head of the International Rescue Committee stresses that the choice is stark: Keeping millions alive in the most vulnerable countries will require pulling some assistance for programs in better-off countries that target everything from climate change to refugee resettlement.

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To keep millions alive after aid cuts, pull climate and other funding in richer nations, group says

David Miliband, president and CEO of the International Rescue Committee, speaks during an interview with the Associated Press, Thursday, May 8, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)


WASHINGTON (AP) — As the world’s humanitarian organizations are triaging their shrinking amount of funding, the head of the International Rescue Committee stresses that the choice is stark: Keeping millions alive in the most vulnerable countries will require pulling some assistance for programs in better-off countries that target everything from climate change to refugee resettlement.

Life-saving food, water and health programs already are shutting down in countries including Sudan, where the closing of 80% of communal kitchens has . That comes after the Trump administration dissolved the and .

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