UKHIYA, Bangladesh — The United States' decision to slash its foreign aid program has contributed to a sharp rise in abuses involving children trapped in Bangladesh's refugee camps for members of Myanmar's persecuted Rohingya minority, The Associated Press found.
In interviews with 37 children, family members, teachers, community leaders and aid workers, the AP has documented an increase in child marriage, child labor, kidnapping and other violations against children since U.S. President Donald Trump's decision in January to dismantle the U.S. Agency for International Development.
Here's a closer look at AP's report on the fallout from the aid cuts:
Funding slashed
More than half of the 1.2 million Rohingya languishing in these camps are children. Bangladesh bars the Rohingya from working, and they are unable to safely return to their homeland of Myanmar, which is controlled by the same military that killed thousands of Rohingya in 2017 in what the U.S. dubbed a genocide. That has left them dependent upon humanitarian aid to survive.
The U.S. has long been the biggest provider of humanitarian funding to the Rohingya. But in January, Trump dubbed USAID wasteful and shut it down, despite the U.S. spending just 1% of its budget on foreign aid. The move has proven catastrophic for the world's most vulnerable. In Myanmar, the AP found the aid cuts have caused children to starve to death, despite U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio's statement to Congress that ''No one has died'' because of the dissolution of USAID.
In the Bangladesh camps, Trump's decision meant the U.S. contribution for 2025 was slashed nearly in half compared to last year. The overall Rohingya emergency response is only 50% funded for the year, and aid agencies say next year is expected to be far worse.
UNICEF, the United Nations' children's agency, lost 27% of its funding due to the U.S. aid cuts and subsequently shuttered 2,800 of its schools in June.