USAID team fired while in Myanmar earthquake zone, ex-official says

People queue for donated relief supplies following a strong earthquake in Mandalay, Myanmar, April 3, 2025. REUTERS/Stringer
Three U.S. aid workers were laid
off while in Myanmar helping the rescue and recovery from the country's massive
earthquake, a former senior staffer said, as the Trump administration's
dismantling of foreign aid affects its disaster response.
After travelling to the Southeast
Asian nation, the three officials were told late this week they would be let
go, Marcia Wong, a former official at the U.S. Agency for International
Development, told Reuters.
"This team is working
incredibly hard, focussed on getting humanitarian aid to those in need. To get
news of your imminent termination - how can that not be demoralising?"
said Wong, former deputy administrator of USAID’s Bureau for Humanitarian
Assistance, which oversees Washington’s disease response efforts overseas.
President Donald
Trump's government has pledged at least $9 million to Myanmar after the
magnitude-7.7 quake, which has killed more than 3,300.
But his administration's massive
cuts to USAID have hindered its ability to respond, while China,
Russia, India and other nations have rushed in assistance.
The Trump administration has
moved to fire nearly all USAID staff in recent weeks, as billionaire Elon
Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency has slashed funding and dismissed
contractors across the federal bureaucracy in what it calls an attack on
wasteful spending.
The three USAID workers have been
sleeping on the streets in the earthquake zone, Wong said, adding that their
terminations would take effect in a few months. Residents have been sleeping
outside for fear of aftershocks and further building collapses,
Wong said she is in contact with
remaining USAID staff and that she heard about the terminations after an
all-staff meeting on Friday.
Former USAID staff say most of
the people who would have coordinated the response have been let go, while
third-party implementing partners have lost contracts.
The U.S. State Department did not
immediately respond to a request for comment. Secretary of State Marco Rubio on
Friday rejected criticism that Washington was slow to respond to the
March 28 earthquake because USAID was dismantled.
Rather, he told reporters in
Brussels, Myanmar was not "the easiest place to work", saying the
military government does not like the United States and prevents it from
operating in the country as it wants to.
The United Nations has said the
junta was limiting humanitarian aid.
Rubio said the U.S. would no
longer be the world’s top humanitarian donor, calling on other wealthy nations
to step up in assisting Myanmar.
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