
As U.S. abruptly ends support, Liberia faces empty health clinics and unplanned pregnancies
Phay and her partner have two daughters, and they barely make ends meet. Determined not to have more children, she went to a health worker in her village, but contraception pills, implants and condoms had run out. Phay trekked for hours on red clay roads to the nearest clinic, but they had no contraceptives either.
She did not know it, but her mission was doomed from the beginning. Just weeks before, U.S. President Donald Trump abruptly suspended most foreign aid through the U.S. Agency for International Development, which paid for medications in Liberia's public clinics.
Tenacious and outspoken, Phay repeated the trip four times. Then she got pregnant.
'I'm suffering,' she said, with daughter Pauline crying in her arms. 'I have this little child on my back, and the other child in my stomach is suffering.' She must continue farming throughout her pregnancy, she said, or 'I will not eat.'
After she got pregnant she had to wean Pauline off breastfeeding, she said, and the girl became so badly malnourished that she almost died. The U.S. cuts left no therapeutic food to give her, and she is still ill.
Phay is among millions across Africa who have seen their lives upended after the U.S. aid cuts. In Liberia, the American support made up almost 2.6% of the gross national income, the highest percentage anywhere in the world, according to the Center for Global Development.
'The impact of USAID in Liberia cannot be overstated,' said Richlue O. Burphy, who worked for USAID projects for over a decade and manages the National Lottery, a government body. 'Everywhere you go, you see the USAID (signs). And almost all the government institutions ... had some kind of USAID partnership.'
The sense of betrayal runs deep in Liberia, established in the early 1800s with the aim of relocating freed slaves and free-born Black people from the United States. The political system is modeled on that of the U.S., along with its flag. Liberians often refer to the U.S. as their 'big brother.'
Liberia was one of the first countries to receive USAID support, starting in 1961. Its officials thought they would be spared from Trump's cuts because of the countries' close relationship.
Following civil wars and an Ebola epidemic, Liberia's survival has depended largely on foreign aid, mainly from the U.S. and the World Bank. Despite abundant natural wealth, six out of 10 Liberians live in poverty, according to the World Bank, and Liberia is among the world's 10 poorest nations.
The aid cuts pose 'a serious challenge,' especially for the healthcare system, Deputy Finance Minister Dehpue Y. Zuo, responsible for drafting the development budget, told The Associated Press. To make sure the system stays afloat, he said, 'we have to take a dramatic switch to see where we will be cutting funding for other areas.'
Liberia received an average of $527.6 million in aid annually between 2014 and 2023, according to the finance ministry. This year, Liberia was supposed to receive $443 million, but the total estimated impact of the cuts is $290 million — essentially what hadn't been disbursed yet.
USAID funding built schools and health clinics, provided training for teachers and doctors and gave scholarships for study in the U.S. It supported small-scale farmers and paid for school meals.
But most of the U.S. funding went to Liberia's health system, making up 48% of its budget. It funded malaria control, maternal health programs, HIV/AIDS treatment and community health programs. It financed hundreds of health projects run by aid groups.
Now in Bong county, where Phay lives, medicine shelves in health clinics are almost empty. The USAID-funded ambulance cannot function because there is no money for fuel. Hospitals are running out of hand sanitizer and gloves. Training for medical staff has stopped, and community health workers have not been paid in months.
Moses K. Banyan, head of the nearby CB Dunbar Hospital, described the U.S. cuts as 'beyond a shock.' He worried about the future, especially now that Bong county has begun to see a handful of mpox cases spread from neighboring Sierra Leone.
Warning of the cuts could have helped in finding options, he said. 'But it's like you were sleeping, you woke up and you were told: 'Hey, leave this house.''
The withdrawal of U.S. support is an opportunity for others, especially China, experts and officials said. Chinese companies have been operating Liberia's gold mines, building roads and training aid workers. Chinese beer is sold alongside local brands. Many Liberians who would have sent children to universities in the U.S. are now choosing China.
Last month, China opened a cardiology wing in the capital's main hospital, which is named after John F. Kennedy but was commonly referred to as 'Just For Killing' because of its scarce resources, even before the U.S. cuts.
'There are gaps to be filled, and that cannot be covered by the government of Liberia,' said Zuo, the deputy finance minister. 'We are open door to the rest of the world, including the United States.'
In Phay's village of Sarworlor, community health worker Alice Togbah still wears her USAID vest though she hasn't been paid in months. She has no more malaria medication for children. She is running out of cough medicine and diarrhea treatment.
A 4-year-old resident, Promise, got malaria a few days ago. Her mother, Grace Morris, obtained only a limited number of malaria tablets at the nearest clinic because of the U.S. cuts. Now they are finished, and the child still feels ill.
'Children die from malaria here,' she said. Last year, her neighbor's son died because he did not get medication on time.
Morris and other women also seek contraceptives. Liberia in recent years made strides in bringing down teenage pregnancy rates and maternal mortality rates.
For women in traditional, conservative communities, access to contraceptives meant reclaiming some control over their lives.
'If ... my man touches me, I cannot say no because I need to satisfy him,' Phay said. 'But if I have no medicine, I will get pregnant.'
Her 9-year-old daughter, also named Promise, is living in the capital, Monrovia, with her aunt. Phay wants her to finish school and have a different life from hers.
'I am begging, if you people have the medicine, you people need to help us,' she said. 'I don't want her to suffer like me.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NBC News
36 minutes ago
- NBC News
After Texas floods, questions about FEMA's future loom large
The devastating Texas flooding that has killed nearly 120 people is the first high-profile disaster the Federal Emergency Management Agency has faced under the current Trump administration. But while the loss of life has been catastrophic, former and current FEMA officials told NBC News that the relatively small geographic area affected means it's not a true test of what the agency, whose full-time staff has been shrunk by a third, is capable of doing in the wake of a disaster. The real tryout could come later this summer, they say, when there is always the threat that a hurricane could hit several states. As the agency's future is debated — President Donald Trump has talked about possibly 'getting rid of' it — Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, who oversees it, has tightened her grip. Noem now requires that all agency spending over $100,000 be personally approved by her, according to current and former FEMA officials. To prevent delays on the ground, on Monday FEMA officials created a task force to speed up the process of getting Noem's approval, according to two people familiar with that unit. While Noem has been exercising more direct control over the agency, there is a void created by the largely voluntary exodus of FEMA leaders. In May, the agency announced in an internal email the departures of 16 senior officials who took with them a combined disaster expertise of more than 200 years. 'DHS and its components have taken an all-hands-on-desk approach to respond to recovery efforts in Kerrville,' a DHS spokesperson said in a statement to NBC News. 'Under Secretary Noem and Acting Administrator [David] Richardson, FEMA is shifting from bloated, DC-centric dead weight to a lean, deployable disaster force that empowers state actors to provide relief for their citizens. The old processes are being replaced because they failed Americans in real emergencies for decades. … Secretary Noem is delivering accountability to the U.S. taxpayer, which Washington bureaucrats have ignored for decades at the expense of American citizens.' On Wednesday afternoon, officials gathered for the second meeting of the FEMA Review Council, which the president has set up to determine the agency's future role. Trump told reporters in early June, 'We want to wean off of FEMA, and we want to bring it down to the state level.' As of now FEMA still has the same mandate and is managing more than 700 open disasters, according to Chris Currie, who tracks and audits the agency for the Government Accountability Office. 'They are not doing anything different. They are just doing it with less people,' he said in an interview. While the push to get states to do more has some supporters, even at FEMA, some Republican members of Congress have taken care to defend the agency in light of the disastrous floods. 'The role of FEMA is critically important,' Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas told reporters on Capitol Hill this week. 'I think everyone also agrees reforms that make FEMA more nimble, able to respond more quickly to a disaster, those reforms are beneficial, but regardless of the precise structure, the role is critical.' Red tape A key theme of the first FEMA Review Council meeting was how the federal government could reduce red tape. But current and former FEMA officials say Noem's demand to personally sign off on expenditures is creating a layer of bureaucracy that could delay assistance on the ground in Texas and during future hurricanes. A current FEMA official said the new requirement runs counter to the idea of reducing red tape and costs. 'They're adding bureaucracy … and they're adding cost,' the official said. One former senior FEMA official said the agency frequently needs to buy supplies and services in disaster zones and routinely signs contracts that exceed $100,000 to do that. 'FEMA doesn't sneeze without spending that amount of money,' the former official, who requested anonymity because they are working in a related industry, told NBC News. Beyond the rule about Noem approving certain spending, current and former officials said staff are confused about who is in charge of FEMA on a day-to-day basis: Noem or Richardson, who has been acting administrator since early May. One of the former officials said the agency's culture has shifted from being proactive to being more cautious because people are afraid of losing their jobs. DHS spokeswoman Tricia McLaughlin told NBC News that any questions about who is in charge are 'silly,' saying, 'Kristi Noem is the secretary of Homeland Security, which oversees federal emergency management — everyone knows that.' More changes are afoot. Last week the agency officially ended its practice of sending staff to knock on doors in disaster zones as a way to connect victims to services. The change came after FEMA canvassers came under scrutiny last fall when an agency employee told a survivor assistance team to avoid homes with Trump signs. The acting administrator at the time called the FEMA staffer's actions 'reprehensible.' The staffer, who was fired, has since told NewsNation that she was following orders from a supervisor and that the move was intended to help employees avoid 'hostile encounters.' While many people access FEMA services through other means, including its website and hotline, two former senior officials said door knocking is still an essential way that disaster victims get connected to services. It's unclear if the agency is sending or will send staff to knock on doors in Texas. This week a Democratic senator also complained that he has not yet seen the 2025 hurricane plan that Noem said at a May hearing she would share. Sen. Andy Kim of New Jersey, the top Democrat on the Subcommittee on Disaster Management, will send a letter Wednesday to Noem asking for the plan again. 'The reports of FEMA's incomplete 2025 hurricane season plan on the cusp of the start of hurricane season and DHS' slowness in providing the plan to this Committee are equally unsettling,' Kim wrote in the letter. FEMA or states? The key question going forward for FEMA remains what role, if any, it will play in disaster recovery, and what part of its previous mission will be delegated to the states to handle on their own. Experts who spoke with NBC News say it's clear the federal agency should still have a role in managing large-scale multistate disasters. What is less clear is whether states should be encouraged to do more to manage smaller disasters instead of relying on the federal government to bail them out. 'We need to incentivize states to spend more before requiring federal assistance,' said Jeff Schlegelmilch, director of the National Center for Disaster Preparedness at Columbia University. Natalie Simpson, a professor at the University of Buffalo who is an expert in emergency services and disaster response, said larger states can handle more responsibility when disaster strikes. 'I think big states like California, New York and Florida have enough economies of scale so they can set up a mini-FEMA, but I think other states it won't be as effective,' she said in an interview. Current and former FEMA officials pointed to comments Texas Gov. Greg Abbott made at the first FEMA Review Council meeting, in which he called FEMA 'clunky and 'slow' and that 'states have proven that we can move more nimbly, more swiftly and more effectively.' They noted that the governor had asked for a FEMA disaster declaration within days of the floods. On Sunday the president dodged a question about whether he would still eliminate the agency, telling reporters: 'Well FEMA is something we can talk about later. But right now, they're busy working, so we'll leave it at that.' By Monday, White House spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said talks around the broader purpose of the agency were ongoing. 'The president wants to ensure American citizens always have what they need during times of need. Whether that assistance comes from states or the federal government, that's a policy discussion that will continue,' Leavitt said.


Press and Journal
an hour ago
- Press and Journal
Police prepare for Donald Trump visit this month - but will he visit new Aberdeenshire golf course?
Police have stepped up preparations for Donald Trump visiting Scotland in July as expectations build he will visit his new Aberdeenshire golf course. The US President's second Balmedie course – named after his Hebridean mother Mary – is officially set to open on August 13 next month. But rooms at the business tycoon's Aberdeenshire resort are fully booked out from July 26 onwards. President Trump's son Eric previously told the Press and Journal his dad would 'almost certainly' be in the north-east for the first tee-off. 'The expectation is he'll be making a visit', one source said today. One insider says staff working at two golf tournaments being held at Trump International next month have been told they will need security permits. Police Scotland Assistant Chief Constable Emma Bond said: 'Planning is underway for a potential visit to Scotland later this month by the President of the United States. 'While official confirmation has not yet been made, it is important that we prepare in advance for what would be a significant policing operation.' We reported last month that President Trump was back in significant control of his Aberdeenshire golf resort after eight years. This had previously ended when he stepped down as director in January 2017, before his first four-year stint in the White House. President Trump's first Balmedie course opened in 2012 after years of controversy. The businessman had officially unveiled his plans for the development more than a half-decade earlier in 2006 after purchasing more than 1,000 acres of land. Last year, we reported that losses at the US Republican chief's golf resort had almost doubled in 2023 to £1.4 million before taxes. President Trump's son Eric has described the new Balmedie spot as the 'Mona Lisa of golf courses'. The UK is also set to host the American commander-in-chief for an official state visit later this year. No date has been set, but it's expected to take place in September.

Leader Live
an hour ago
- Leader Live
Pope Leo and Zelensky agree that Vatican could host Ukraine-Russia peace talks
Both he and Leo suggested the Vatican could host peace talks to end the war. Mr Zelensky called on Leo at the papal summer retreat in Castel Gandolfo, in the Alban hills south of Rome. Mr Zelensky is in Rome to attend the fourth Ukraine recovery conference, which is taking place on Thursday and Friday. The Vatican said Leo and Mr Zelensky discussed the conflict 'and the urgent need for a just and lasting peace.' 'The Holy Father expressed his sorrow for the victims and renewed his prayers and closeness to the Ukrainian people, encouraging every effort aimed at the release of prisoners and the search for shared solutions,' a Vatican statement said. 'The Holy Father reiterated the willingness to welcome representatives of Russia and Ukraine to the Vatican for negotiations.' I am grateful to Pope Leo XIV @Pontifex for the warm welcome at his private residence — the Papal Palace of Castel Gandolfo. It is a great honor for me to be here, in a place which has contributed to shaping the history of Europe and the world for the past four centuries. This… — Volodymyr Zelenskyy / Володимир Зеленський (@ZelenskyyUa) July 9, 2025 The United States had indicated the Vatican could host possible peace talks between Ukraine and Russia, but Moscow has not accepted it. Speaking to reporters as he left the pope's villa, Zelenskyy said he thanked the American pope for the Vatican's efforts to help reunite children taken by Russia after Moscow's 2022 invasion. He asked for continued help and prayers 'to get back our children stolen by Russia during this war'. Pope Francis had named an envoy, Italian Cardinal Matteo Zuppi, to try to facilitate the return of children and find 'paths to peace' between the two sides. The Russian government has faced international condemnation over unlawful deportations of Ukrainian families, including children, to Russia following Putin's order for Russian troops to launch a full-scale invasion of Ukraine on February 24 2022.