Updates to our Terms of Use

We are updating our Terms of Use. Please carefully review the updated Terms before proceeding to our website.

Thursday, March 28, 2024 | Back issues
Courthouse News Service Courthouse News Service

Trump’s Freeze of WHO Funding Hurts Latin America

As much as $110 million in U.S. funding for disease prevention in Latin America as well as U.S. support for Venezuelan emigrants has been thrown into doubt as part of President Trump's decision to halt funding to the World Health Organization.

MIAMI (AP) — As much as $110 million in U.S. funding for disease prevention in Latin America as well as U.S. support for Venezuelan emigrants has been thrown into doubt as part of President Trump's decision to halt funding to the World Health Organization.

Rep. Eliot Engel, the Democratic chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, sent a letter Thursday to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo complaining that freezing funds for the Pan American Health Organization threatened to worsen the plight of Venezuelans suffering at the hands of Nicolás Maduro.

"We believe it is dangerous and shortsighted of the Trump Administration to pause U.S. funding for the life-saving work" by PAHO in Venezuela, the New York Democrat wrote in the letter, which was also signed by Rep. Albio Sires, chairman of the subcommittee focused on Latin America.

PAHO said this week that the United States had suspended its contributions as an extension of Trump's funding freeze for the WHO.

But two U.S. officials said that no final decision had been made. One said the next U.S. payment is not due until late May and an exclusion for PAHO is being discussed. Both officials insisted on anonymity to discuss internal deliberations.

The Washington-based PAHO is unique in that it is both a regional office in the Americas for the WHO but also a separately run institution that predates by almost a half century the creation of the United Nations agency. Only about one-third of its funding comes from the WHO, with the rest provided by its 35 member states, of which the United States is by far its largest contributor, responsible for 60% of its budget. The United States owes PAHO $110 million in assessed contributions for 2019 and 2020.

The State Department and U.S. Agency for International Development would not comment.

Engel in his letter said he was dismayed to learn that $12 million in U.S. funding for PAHO to conduct diagnostics and tracing for the coronavirus in Venezuela and among Venezuelan emigrants in Colombia was on hold.

He said U.S.-supported efforts inside Venezuela had saved lives and prevented the spread of Covid-19. He said a PAHO-backed measles vaccination program supported by $3.4 million in USAID funding enabled 9 million Venezuelan children to get shots and paved the way for a 90% decline in measles cases from 5,800 in 2018 to less than 600 in 2019. He cited studies indicating as many as 94% of Venezuelans are living in poverty and 7 million need humanitarian assistance.

PAHO declined to comment, but cited comments by Dr. Carissa Etienne, who heads the organization, that Trump's freeze in funding for the WHO had been "extended" to include U.S. funding for PAHO.

"Over the years we have enjoyed a very firm collaboration and technical support from the U.S. government," Dr. Carissa Etienne said Tuesday. "This mutual collaboration between the U.S. and PAHO has stood the test of many, many years and it is our hope that we can continue to work in this vein to insure that health and well-being come to the majority of people in the Americas."

Trump two weeks ago halted funding to the Geneva-based WHO, claiming it had mimicked Chinese assurances about the coronavirus' spread, wrongly opposed travel restrictions at the start of the outbreak and was slow to declare the outbreak a global pandemic.

Many philanthropists, including Bill Gates and Michael Bloomberg, joined European and African leaders and health experts in criticizing the decision.

PAHO is one of the few ways the United States is able to channel aid to Venezuela since it does not recognize Maduro and has no functioning embassy in Caracas.

In the early days of the coronavirus pandemic, PAHO was key in brokering contact between Venezuelan health officials and their counterparts in Colombia to discuss ways to stop the virus' spread among millions of poor Venezuelans who have fled the country in recent years and are expected to overload Colombia's already overburdened health system if the pandemic worsens. Like the United States, Colombia does not recognize Maduro.

Maduro has consistently rejected U.S. offers of humanitarian aid, calling them an underhanded attempt to destabilize his rule. The opposition has been similarly reluctant to work with Maduro officials to distribute the aid that has trickled in from the International Committee of the Red Cross, the Roman Catholic Church and other sources, seeing it as a tool of coercion.

But over the past year, as efforts to unseat Maduro have stalled and social conditions have deteriorated, the opposition has quietly eased its objections to working through the socialist government in the belief that regular Venezuelans will benefit and to prepare for eventually assuming power itself one day. One opposition official called the cooperation "a necessary evil."


By JOSHUA GOODMAN

Categories / Government, Health, International, Politics

Subscribe to Closing Arguments

Sign up for new weekly newsletter Closing Arguments to get the latest about ongoing trials, major litigation and hot cases and rulings in courthouses around the U.S. and the world.

Loading...