Zürcher Nachrichten - US aid cuts strain response to health crises worldwide: WHO

EUR -
AED 4.200937
AFN 80.072053
ALL 97.739653
AMD 438.569241
ANG 2.047197
AOA 1048.947407
ARS 1358.357969
AUD 1.760481
AWG 2.059003
AZN 1.937068
BAM 1.958574
BBD 2.309842
BDT 139.816216
BGN 1.955115
BHD 0.431236
BIF 3363.037533
BMD 1.14389
BND 1.469637
BOB 7.904955
BRL 6.388651
BSD 1.144106
BTN 98.079929
BWP 15.274168
BYN 3.743889
BYR 22420.250221
BZD 2.297985
CAD 1.563326
CDF 3295.547961
CHF 0.938385
CLF 0.027745
CLP 1064.687418
CNY 8.208576
CNH 8.211594
COP 4697.099616
CRC 582.232365
CUC 1.14389
CUP 30.313093
CVE 110.556735
CZK 24.804348
DJF 203.292901
DKK 7.459961
DOP 67.713276
DZD 150.354113
EGP 56.774824
ERN 17.158355
ETB 153.394047
FJD 2.57118
FKP 0.843149
GBP 0.842904
GEL 3.123047
GGP 0.843149
GHS 11.724328
GIP 0.843149
GMD 80.642526
GNF 9900.370288
GTQ 8.791338
GYD 239.702203
HKD 8.975081
HNL 29.752248
HRK 7.534915
HTG 149.680059
HUF 403.370411
IDR 18595.195389
ILS 3.990044
IMP 0.843149
INR 98.25961
IQD 1498.496316
IRR 48157.782467
ISK 144.392909
JEP 0.843149
JMD 182.428409
JOD 0.811014
JPY 164.460508
KES 148.103999
KGS 100.03304
KHR 4600.726914
KMF 492.447923
KPW 1029.498794
KRW 1552.270296
KWD 0.350671
KYD 0.953321
KZT 583.608823
LAK 24685.152519
LBP 51126.951544
LKR 342.224289
LRD 228.096428
LSL 20.306999
LTL 3.377611
LVL 0.691928
LYD 6.228491
MAD 10.465483
MDL 19.751373
MGA 5124.628924
MKD 61.530127
MMK 2401.867099
MNT 4093.338663
MOP 9.246815
MRU 45.326632
MUR 51.898441
MVR 17.621597
MWK 1985.220614
MXN 21.913975
MYR 4.839001
MZN 73.152051
NAD 20.307265
NGN 1787.322687
NIO 42.106174
NOK 11.530992
NPR 156.934355
NZD 1.894831
OMR 0.439817
PAB 1.143985
PEN 4.147175
PGK 4.693668
PHP 63.690627
PKR 322.74823
PLN 4.280609
PYG 9136.942453
QAR 4.164852
RON 5.049357
RSD 117.171023
RUB 88.365648
RWF 1624.324251
SAR 4.290183
SBD 9.540536
SCR 16.438424
SDG 686.334287
SEK 10.96114
SGD 1.471472
SHP 0.898918
SLE 25.909233
SLL 23986.808255
SOS 653.770853
SRD 42.25758
STD 23676.220065
SVC 10.010179
SYP 14873.174061
SZL 20.315182
THB 37.308556
TJS 11.31418
TMT 4.015055
TND 3.391666
TOP 2.679104
TRY 44.93645
TTD 7.742068
TWD 34.217877
TZS 3048.467476
UAH 47.403647
UGX 4151.826607
USD 1.14389
UYU 47.61745
UZS 14641.79605
VES 112.443417
VND 29808.065836
VUV 138.223024
WST 3.153815
XAF 656.867352
XAG 0.031795
XAU 0.00034
XCD 3.091421
XDR 0.819925
XOF 655.449426
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.323026
ZAR 20.311935
ZMK 10296.378489
ZMW 29.82934
ZWL 368.332215
  • CMSC

    0.0000

    22.23

    0%

  • RYCEF

    -0.2850

    11.865

    -2.4%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    10.21

    -0.49%

  • NGG

    -0.0200

    71.03

    -0.03%

  • RBGPF

    0.4600

    67.96

    +0.68%

  • SCS

    0.0000

    10.37

    -0%

  • BTI

    1.2650

    47.44

    +2.67%

  • RIO

    0.7000

    59.24

    +1.18%

  • GSK

    0.3500

    41.15

    +0.85%

  • BP

    0.1300

    29.05

    +0.45%

  • CMSD

    -0.0311

    22.2

    -0.14%

  • BCC

    -0.0300

    87.47

    -0.03%

  • RELX

    -0.5550

    53.8

    -1.03%

  • BCE

    -0.1150

    21.86

    -0.53%

  • AZN

    -0.6500

    72.35

    -0.9%

  • JRI

    -0.0100

    12.95

    -0.08%

US aid cuts strain response to health crises worldwide: WHO
US aid cuts strain response to health crises worldwide: WHO / Photo: Benoit Tessier - POOL/AFP

US aid cuts strain response to health crises worldwide: WHO

The United States slashing foreign aid risks piling pressure on already acute humanitarian crises across the globe, a World Health Organization official said Sunday, also warning against withdrawing from the UN agency.

Text size:

Since taking office in January, President Donald Trump has effectively frozen foreign aid funding, moved to dismantle the US Agency for International Development (USAID) and other programmes, and announced plans to leave the WHO.

Washington, which had long been the WHO's biggest donor, did not pay its 2024 dues, and it remains unclear if the United States will meet its membership obligations for 2025

The agency, already facing a gaping deficit this year, has proposed shrinking its budget by a fifth, likely reducing its reach and workforce, according to an earlier AFP report citing an internal email.

"The WHO with its partners have a significant role in sustaining healthcare systems, rehabilitation of healthcare systems, emergency medical team training and dispatching, pre-placement of trauma kits," Hanan Balkhy, the WHO's regional director for the Eastern Mediterranean, told AFP.

"Many of these programmes have now stopped or are not going to be able to continue," she said.

The funding cuts will likely hinder the ability to continue delivering robust aid to communities in desperate need of care.

Balkhy cited the ongoing conflicts in Gaza, Sudan, and Yemen as areas where healthcare institutions and aid programmes were already under pressure before the funding shakeups.

In the Gaza Strip, where more than a year and a half of fighting has seen large swaths of the Palestinian territory reduced to rubble and few hospitals remain functioning, the public health situation is dire.

"The emergency medical team support, procurement of the medications and the rehabilitation of the health care facilities, all of that has been immediately impacted by the freeze of the US support," said Balkhy.

In Sudan, the WHO is facing mounting issues amid a bloody civil war that has displaced millions, with several areas hit by at least three different disease outbreaks -- malaria, dengue and cholera, according to Balkhy.

"We work significantly to identify emerging and re-emerging pathogens to keep the Sudanese safe, but also to keep the rest of the world safe. So it will impact our ability to continue to do surveillance, detection of diseases," she added.

A US departure from the WHO will also undercut long established channels of communication with leading research facilities, universities and public health institutions that are based in the United States.

That in turn would likely prevent the easy sharing of information and research, which is pivotal to heading off global public health crises like an emerging pandemic, said Balkhy.

"These bacteria and viruses, number one, know no borders. Number two, they are ambivalent to what's happening in the human political landscape."

X.Blaser--NZN