Cutting foreign assistance to Dogg caused “total chaos” around the world
Representatives of dozens of non -profit organizations present at a large human rights conference in Taipei, Taiwan, woke up on Thursday for devastating news. In the previous night in Asia, Donald Trump’s administration has sharply announced that it will end nearly 10,000 treaties and grants from the US State Department, including the Democracy, Human and Labor Bureau (DRL), as well as The The US Agency for International Developmentpresenting for 90 percent of USAID contracts as a whole.
The announcement was the latest in a number of Trump administration efforts and the so-called Elon Musk Ministry of Efficiency Ministry to limit foreign assistance from the United States, which provides medical and humanitarian assistance to millions of people from decades. A letter sent from USAID to the Grants discussed by Wired instructs them “to terminate all activities immediately, to terminate all subcontracts and contracts”, and avoid reaching additional costs, “in addition to these inevitable costs related to this termination notice.”
Several digital and human rights who have talked to Wired in Taipei, provided for anonymity of fear of retribution from the Trump administration or their own governments, to say the redundancies undermine the years of initiatives to build global democracy and free speech and put their lives at risk.
Many of the groups that were in Rightscon, one of the largest annual events focused on human rights and technology organized by non -profit access now, are more specially focused on providing support for cybersecurity for people such as journalists and other vulnees in authority They intimidate and remain silent. Without USAID funding and the State Department, this job is likely to stop.
“Digital security ecosystem has collapsed entirely for NGOs, completely,” says Mohammed Al Mascati, Director of the Access Now Digital Security Auxiliary Line, which offers free assistance for digital security to journalists, activists and civil society groups.
Causing even more confusion, just days after the cancellation of some organizations, they say they have received notifications that they have been sent in error, according to the correspondence reviewed by Wired. It is not clear how the Trump administration has determined which grants and organizations will be spared.
However, non -profit organizations that can retain their funding from the US government, however, will be subordinated to a new requirement: their contracts now include a rider that is required to observe Anti-executive order that Trump signed in late January. It applies to all the organization’s programs, even if they do not receive American support. Failure to comply with the order may be a violation of A law on fake claimsThe Trump administration warned with materials reviewed by Wired.
When Wired initially addressed the cancellation, a representative of the State Department stated that “each program underwent a review in order to restructure assistance in order to be aligned with the priorities of the administration’s policy. The programs that serve the interests of our nation will continue. Programs that are not aligned with our national interest will not. “
The State Department did not answer subsequent questions about the reimbursement of certain grants. USAID did not reply to comment requests. In a Post On Monday, Musk claims that “no one died as a result of a brief pause to make a strength to fund foreign assistance. No one. “He categorizes Dodge’s work at the Aid Agency last month, boasting that he had spent a weekend”Nutrition of USAID in the wooden chipperS “