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Obama and Bush Condemn Closure of USAID as Report Warns of 14m Extra Deaths
The Guardian
|July 02, 2025
Barack Obama and George W. Bush have criticized the closure of the US Agency for International Development (USAID), as a study warned it could result in 14 million additional deaths by 2030.
The former US presidents made rare public criticisms of the Trump administration as they took part in a video farewell for USAID staffers on Monday, on its last day as an independent organization.
In March, the US secretary of state, Marco Rubio, announced that 83% of USAID's programs had been canceled. The agency is being folded into the state department, where it is to be replaced by a successor organization called America First.
A study published in the Lancet found that the cuts could cause more than 14 million additional deaths by 2030, a third of them children.
USAID funding for healthcare, nutrition, humanitarian aid, development, education, and related sectors have helped to prevent more than 91 million deaths in low- and middle-income countries over the past two decades, the multinational group of researchers calculated.
The study concluded: "Unless the abrupt funding cuts announced and implemented in the first half of 2025 are reversed, a staggering number of avoidable deaths could occur by 2030."
For many of the world's poorer countries, "the resulting shock would be similar in scale to a global pandemic or a major armed conflict," they said, but "would stem from a conscious and avoidable policy choice."
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition July 02, 2025 de The Guardian.
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