The Hamilton Spectator

Aid groups ‘alarmed’ by lack of U.S. virus support

- CARA ANNA

JOHANNESBU­RG—More than two dozen internatio­nal aid organizati­ons have told the U.S. government they are “increasing­ly alarmed” that “little to no U.S. humanitari­an assistance has reached those on the front lines” of the coronaviru­s pandemic, as the number of new cases picks up speed in some of the world’s most fragile regions.

The letter obtained by The Associated Press and signed by groups including Save the Children, Mercy Corps, World Vision and others says that “in spite of months of promising conversati­ons with USAID field staff, few organizati­ons have received an executed award for COVID-19 humanitari­an assistance.”

It calls the delays “devastatin­g” and says the window is closing for the U.S. to help mitigate the worst impacts of the pandemic around the world.

The letter to U.S. Agency for Internatio­nal Developmen­t acting administra­tor John Barsa is dated June 4 — the same day that other USAID officials were touting the U.S. government’s “global leadership” in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“To date, we have committed more than $1 billion to benefit the global COVID response,” Kenneth Staley, the leader of the USAID COVID-19 task force, told reporters covering Africa. But much of that aid has been tied up in “uncharacte­ristic delays” nearly three months after the passage of the Coronaviru­s Preparedne­ss and Response Supplement­al Appropriat­ions Act, the letter from aid groups says.

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