

“I wished for death to end the nightmare I was living through”.
Received this awful testimony from a colleague who was rounded up in Gaza tortured while in Israeli detention and finally released.
For UNRWA staff humanitarian duty is met with brutality.
Since the start of the war in October 2023, over 50 UNRWA staff among them teachers, doctors, social workers, have been detained and abused.
They have been treated in the most shocking and inhumane way. They reported being beaten up and used as human shields.
They were subjected to sleep deprivation, humiliation, threats of harm to them and their families and attacks by dogs.
Many were subjected to forced confessions.
― Philippe Lazzarini, UNRWA Commissioner-General
The United Nations is facing a severe liquidity crisis, affecting many of its agencies.
quotes
The Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) says that only 5 percent of the nearly $45 billion needed for funding in the humanitarian community this year has been received as of the 6th of March, leaving a gap of more than $42 billion. Reuters reports that OCHA itself is to “cut 20% of its staff as it faces a shortfall of $58 million”, “U.N. aid chief Tom Fletcher told staff” [no publicly available statements found on UN websites with these numbers.]
With the US leaving the World Health Organization, refusing to pay it’s contributions for 2024 and 2025, combined with reductions in funding by some other countries, WHO is expected to face a salary gap for the 2026-27 biennium between US$ 560 and US$ 650 million. Representing at least 25% of staff costs in the current biennium. While other member states have agreed to increase their contributions, increasing the 2026-27 biennium funding by US$ 320, it is too little, and has left the WHO with no choice but to restructure and reduce the scale of their work and workforce. Cutting the senior leadership team from twelve to seven, and departments by over half, from 76 to 34.2
The UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has projected “its 2026 budget to shrink by at least 20% compared to 2024”, as reported by Reuters [no publicly available statements found on UN websites with these numbers.]. This years budget is also affected, meaning that “At least 14 million children are expected to face disruptions to nutrition support and services”.
Speaking at the UN on the 21 March, Deputy Executive Director Kitty Palais said:
The World Food Program is expected to cut its staff by up to 30%, as reported by AP [no publicly available statements found on UN websites with these numbers.]. The agency said on March 28th that it was “facing an alarming 40 percent drop in funding for 2025”.
AP also reported that the High Commissioner for Refugees “would downsize its headquarters and regional offices to reduce costs by 30% and cut senior-level positions by 50%” [no publicly available statements found on UN websites with these numbers.]. With the agency saying that it’s “health budget has been cut by 87 per cent”.
A much more insignificant result of the crisis, but much closer to me, the Meetings Coverage and Press Releases has been publishing coverage of UN meetings later, and using machine translation of coverage by the French team.
[1] https://news.un.org/en/story/2025/04/1162751
[2] https://www.who.int/news-room/speeches/item/who-director-general-s-opening-remarks-at-the-member-state-briefing-on-the-programme-budget---22-april-2025
[3] https://www.unicef.org/press-releases/least-14-million-children-face-disruptions-critical-nutrition-services-2025-unicef