UNITED NATIONS — Several U.N. agencies that provide aid to children, refugees and other vulnerable people around the world are slashing jobs or cutting costs in other ways, with officials pointing to funding reductions mainly from the United States and warning that vital relief programs will be severely affected as a result.
The U.N. World Food Program is expected to cut up to 30% of its staff. The head of the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees said it would downsize its headquarters and regional offices to reduce costs by 30% and cut senior-level positions by 50%.
That's according to internal memos obtained by The AP and verified by two U.N. officials who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss the internal personnel decisions. Other agencies like UNICEF, the U.N. children's agency, and OCHA, the U.N. humanitarian agency, have also announced or plan to make cuts.
One WFP official called the cuts ''the most massive'' seen by the agency in the past 25 years, and that as a result, operations will disappear or be downsized.
The U.N. agency cuts underscore the impact of President Donald Trump's decision to pull the U.S. back from its position as the world's single largest aid donor. Trump has given billionaire ally Elon Musk and his Department of Government Efficiency power to redo the scale of the federal government, with a focus on slashing foreign assistance. Even before the administration's move, many donor nations had reduced humanitarian spending, and U.N. agencies struggled to reach funding goals.
U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric said Secretary-General Antonio Guterres was ''deeply troubled by the drastic funding reduction."
''The heads of our humanitarian agencies are being forced to take impossibly painful decisions as budget cuts have an immediate and often deadly impact on the world's most vulnerable,'' Dujarric said in a statement. ''We understand the pressures on national budgets faced by governments, but these cuts come at a time when military spending again hits record levels."
The U.N. also is engaging in a larger reform effort ahead of its 80th anniversary this summer. Guterres' office issued a system-wide memo last week ordering an internal ''functional review'' of all U.N. entities to make cost reductions and efficiencies.