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UN reduces its aid appeal to 2026 despite rising need

The United Nations called on Monday for an aid budget for 2026 that was only half of what they had hoped to receive this year. They acknowledged a drop in funding from donors at a moment when the humanitarian crisis is more urgent than ever.

The U.N. admits that its $23 billion appeal will exclude tens millions of people who are in dire need of assistance. Falling support has forced U.N. organizations to prioritize only the most desperate.

These funding cuts are on top of the other challenges facing aid agencies, including security threats to staff in conflict zones as well as lack of access.

U.N. MAKES 'TOUGH CHOICES BRUTAL'

Tom Fletcher, U.N. Aid Chief, told reporters that "it's ultimately the cuts that force us to these tough, hard, brutal choices we're forced to make."

He said, "We're overstretched and underfunded. We are also under attack." "And we drive our ambulance toward the fire." In your name. We are now also asked to extinguish the fire. There isn't enough water in the tank. And we're being shot at."

The U.N. had requested $47 billion in aid for 2025, but this figure was drastically reduced as President Donald Trump and other major Western donors like Germany started to reveal their scale of cuts.

The figures for November showed that it has received just $12 billion, the lowest amount in 10 years. This is only a little over a quarter.

The $23 billion plan for next year identifies 87 millions people as priority cases, whose lives are at risk. It says that a quarter billion people are in need of urgent help, and it plans to provide 135 million with assistance at a cost $33 billion.

The occupied Palestinian territory is the recipient of the largest single appeal, $4 billion. Gaza is the main beneficiary of this appeal, as it has been devastated by two years of Israel-Hamas violence, leaving nearly all its 2.3m inhabitants homeless and dependent upon aid.

Sudan is second, followed by Syria.

STRETCHED HUMANITARIAN RESPONSES

The Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC), a major NGO that operates in dozens humanitarian crises including Gaza and Sudan said Monday that the funding limitations would push humanitarian response to its limit.

Maureen Magee said, "We are concerned that a lack of funds will prevent millions of people in crisis in places such as the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Myanmar, and Syria from receiving aid."

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) is also reducing its budget. The organization requested in its 2026 Global Appeal, released on Monday half of the money it had asked for the previous year.

The request is for $4.7 billion in order to help 41 million people who are forced to leave their homes because of climate change or conflict. It also includes assistance with their return. The company said that it had already raised $1.3 billion. It asked for $8.2 Billion last year to help 101 Million People.

U.N. agencies that provide humanitarian aid rely largely on donations from Western donors. The United States is by far the largest donor in history.

U.N. figures showed that despite Trump’s cuts, it would still be the top country in 2025. However, its share of the total had dropped from more than a third to just 15.6%. (Reporting and editing by Aidan Lewis, Frances Kerry and Emma Farge)

(source: Reuters)