
The UNHCR is facing a towering crisis: amid surging global displacement, humanitarian funding has been fast evaporating since US President Donald Trump returned to office in January.
“Almost 5,000 UNHCR colleagues have already lost their jobs this year,” Filippo Grandi said.
“This is more than a quarter of our entire workforce,” he said, warning that “that number is expected to grow.”
An agency spokesman told AFP that both full-time staff and people on temporary or consultancy contracts had lost their jobs.
Traditionally the world’s top donor, the US has heavily slashed foreign aid, causing havoc across the globe.
Washington previously accounted for over 40% of the UNHCR’s budget and that, along with belt-tightening by other major donor countries, has left the agency in a dire situation, Grandi acknowledged.
“The numbers are bleak,” he said.
UNHCR had an approved budget for 2025 of US$10.6 billion, Grandi said, stressing though that the agency in recent years had received only “approximately half of our budget requirements” – or around US$5 billion.
“As things stand, we project we will end 2025 with US$3.9. billion in funds available – a decrease of US$1.3 billion compared to 2024, or roughly 25% less.”
“No country, no sector, no partner has been spared,” Grandi said. “Critical programmes and lifesaving activities have to be stopped, gender-based violence prevention work, psychosocial support to survivors of torture, and stopped.
“Schools were closed, food assistance decreased, cash grants cut, resettlement ground to a halt. This is what happens when you slash funding by over US$1 billion in a matter of weeks.”