WASHINGTON — 5 months after the Trump administration stripped $8 billion in U.S. overseas assist from the world, a Sudanese Nationwide Military helicopter bombed a hospital, pharmacy and market in a distant village of South Sudan referred to as Previous Fangak.
Located in a deep pocket of grassy swampland shaped by floodwaters from the Nile that haven’t receded for 5 years thanks to climate change, Previous Fangak was dwelling to 1000’s of internally displaced South Sudanese girls and youngsters — together with many former boy troopers — fleeing civil warfare within the area.
At the least seven folks had been killed within the Might bombing. Medical doctors With out Borders reported their medical provides had been obliterated. Refugees scattered to wherever they might discover greater or drier floor. Handmade dykes that had stored floodwaters from consuming Previous Fangak fell into disrepair after which broke, washing away the makeshift properties and scant belongings of the individuals who lived within the village.
“It was an ideal storm of a humanitarian disaster,” Dan Pisegna, program director of Alaska Health Project South Sudan, informed HuffPost earlier this month. “A number of compounding emergencies had been occurring on the similar time.”
Since 2009, South Sudanese volunteers — and some Individuals from Alaska — have created entry to wash water by drilling and sustaining boreholes, or holes dug into the bottom to entry water. Their effort is liable for about 75% of the wells in Fangak County. It’s a very important service since most of South Sudan lacks entry to wash water, driving up mortality charges and rising the unfold of illnesses like cholera, typhoid, hepatitis, brucellosis and giardiasis. AHPSS additionally teaches native girls easy methods to farm sustainably.

Photograph by Alaska Well being Mission South Sudan
AHPSS has not gotten any direct funding from USAID, the unbiased U.S. authorities company that till this 12 months had supplied help to overseas and growing nations. However over time, the small nonprofit has partnered with different humanitarian organizations that did depend on USAID — utilizing the non-public cash AHPSS raised to subsidize these teams’ efforts to deal with crises within the area when public grants had been restricted or a response was wanted quick.
It was a “win-win,” Pisegna stated.
However as quickly as he reentered workplace, President Donald Trump took an ax to authorities spending, together with USAID. The cuts decimated meals, well being, medical and different companies worldwide. Humanitarian networks that after had the flexibility to faucet organizations like AHPSS for sure companies are actually working on shoestring budgets. When their funding dries up, smaller organizations like AHPSS are left to step up.
“We’ve got the battle and the flooding, however what has actually exacerbated the emergency has been the final lack of funding,” Pisegna stated. “I feel when USAID was pulled out, there was a sense that somebody may step in to fill that void. To this point, it has probably not come to fruition.”

Photograph by Alaska Well being Mission South Sudan
Consequently, about two dozen folks from South Sudan and some employees from AHPSS have been doubling down on their efforts to construct and preserve entry to wash water in an space that has been struck by tragedy time after time.
Doing Extra With Much less
“The quantity of sweat is insane,” stated David Kapla, a survivalist, bushman, and yearslong volunteer for AHPSS.
To drill water wells for 1000’s of displaced folks, a 60-foot-long, 10-ton metal canoe is first transported, together with different heavy gear, by donkey cart on rocky terrain. No vehicles can journey to launch-points for the canoe as a result of there are not any roads. This November, when Kapla and his group had been putting in wells, the typical temperature was 90 levels.
By hand, they load a 1,000-pound bore rig that should be assembled within the subject from 200 to 300 particular person items. They add 500 kilos of cement, 500 kilos of rock, and a few thousand kilos of metal. These supplies are for elevated platforms the place gravity-fed “faucet stands” can pump water for 1,500 folks per stand. A platform can maintain no less than two faucet stands, and the pumps can be utilized even when the nicely is submerged in a number of toes of contaminated floodwater.
The group navigates via marshes with head-high grass and air thick with mosquitoes. Water ranges typically exceed 4 toes however ebb and circulate, forcing volunteers to tug the laden canoe by rope underneath a blazing solar.
The South Sudanese collaborating with AHPSS are taking up the strenuous work regardless of having little entry to meals.
“They had been dropping 20 kilos in these months after the [USAID] cuts,” Kapla stated. “You’re speaking about regional hunger, starvation, malnutrition prompted just by that minimize of that assist.”
The Trump administration cuts to USAID resulted in Motion Towards Starvation slicing its programming in half. The World Meals Program started slicing its meals distribution and limiting rations to 50% to 70% of their authentic measurement. Save the Youngsters Fund, a charity that gives well being screenings and coverings for illnesses, shuttered seven of its amenities.
Emaciated kids had been forced to search on foot for open well being clinics after so many shut down within the space, AHPSS President Dr. Jack Hickel stated.
“They walked to their deaths,” he stated.
The White Home didn’t instantly return a request for remark.
South Sudan is experiencing its worst cholera outbreak within the nation’s 15-year historical past, in accordance with the World Health Organization. The illness has killed over 1,500 in South Sudan since 2024, and there have been no less than 100,000 suspected instances within the nation as of October.
Hickel, who has spent 10 years serving South Sudan and a lifetime learning tropical illness and hygiene, says that quantity is probably going a low estimate.
“Those which are actually prone to those diarrheal illnesses are the younger, youngsters, the immunocompromised, and older folks,” he stated. “There are a number of toddler deaths happening due to this unhealthy water.”
The precise variety of deaths is difficult to know, in accordance with Damian Seal, a Water, Sanitation and Hygiene (WASH) Cluster Coordinator specialist for South Sudan. So most of the teams that observe, report or share public well being info have been hamstrung.

Photograph by Alaska Well being Mission South Sudan
The shortage of USAID funding for the area might have meant that “cholera unfold greater than it ought to have,” Seal stated.
“You’ve obtained 85% of the nation with out entry to protected sanitation, most likely 65% and above that don’t entry protected water,” he stated.
In accordance with the African Development Bank, 92% of individuals in South Sudan dwell underneath the poverty line.
A part of the fast response group for sanitation and hygiene that had been minimize from WASH Sector Capability funds a 12 months earlier was on the cusp of being introduced again on-line in 2025. However when Trump yanked assist, Seal stated, companies had been then lowered to a “important, important, important” minimal. Plans for that fast response group disappeared.
For years, the U.S. was a “funder of the core pipeline” for fast response groups, which function a invaluable software in a disaster, stated Seal. They’re nimble and cell, and might put locals involved with nationwide or worldwide companions.
After the assault on Previous Fangak, the AHPSS group went trying to see where people they had provided assistance to in the region for years fled. They searched to see the place these folks had congregated so they might set up water wells and distribute seeds and instruments. They discovered them dwelling on little patches of land barely peeking above floodwaters.
Hickel estimated one such “island” contained over 20,000 displaced folks.
“It was so jam-packed with folks … no entry to wash water, no farmland. Plenty of their cows had died, no entry to dependable well being care,” he stated. “It was only a horrible, horrible scenario.”

Photograph by Alaska Well being Mission South Sudan
The group sees girls and youngsters foraging for lily pads, gathering the roots and pounding them into flour.
The flooding makes farming more difficult. In November, AHPSS distributed seeds to 600 households which are appropriate for small plots of land. In years previous, they envisioned larger-scale farms for onions, okra and tomatoes. Now the main target is shifting to aquatic farming strategies that may be taught shortly and final the check of time.
‘Blood On Its Palms’
NGOs could be plagued with corruption, particularly in nations like South Sudan the place determined circumstances vastly restrict oversight. Kapla has seen metal pipes for boreholes find yourself as non-public fencing on authorities property; he has seen NGOs safe contracts for 1000’s of {dollars} above what they should full a job, solely to pocket the excess. He has seen volunteers from well-known NGOs come to South Sudan solely to not often depart their compound, totally failing to forge belief or relationships.
These issues want addressing if the U.S. desires to get essentially the most bang for its buck when it extends a serving to hand to the world.
“I can see a legitimate argument that it takes one thing to interrupt the again of the help business [to fix it],” Kapla stated.
However when one of many wealthiest nations on the earth is snatching sources from a few of the world’s poorest, hungriest and sickest folks, he stated, “You may’t inform me USAID being minimize off was a legitimate use of budgets.”
“The direct impact is for folks to starve and die since you didn’t ship luggage of meals. Your administration has blood on its fingers. That’s the blood of hunger, that’s the blood of dying of treatable illnesses as a result of medicines that had been there for many years are gone,” he stated.
Individuals might not grasp the complete “disgrace and humiliation” the cuts have prompted on the worldwide stage, he stated, and the way it eats into the belief and credibility that humanitarian employees or teams have on the bottom.
However AHPSS has labored to construct belief within the area by delivering what it guarantees: clear water and farming abilities. They interact folks and tribal leaders on their phrases and community for sources. They farm collectively. They eat collectively. They camp collectively.
“They greet us like brothers. I’m far safer on this village than I’m anyplace in the US by way of folks watching my again,” Kapla stated.
The South Sudanese work exhausting and aren’t merely ready for a handout from the U.S., the AHPSS leaders stated. However the funding cuts are heaping new obstacles atop previous ones.
“These folks from the villages that we’ve educated [to build wells or farm], they’re the heroes… first displaced by preventing, then dispersed by flooding. They went to a brand new village and began an entire new compound, and inside a few weeks, they’re in there punching bore wells. They’re heroes. They by no means missed a step,”Hickel stated.
In December, Trump took away yet one more piece of hope for South Sudanese overseas nationals: He banned them from coming into the U.S., citing fears of “widespread corruption.”
Reflecting on the administration’s actions, Kapla stated they’re pages ripped from the oldest playbook.
“Your governments will let you know the world is a scary place as a result of worry controls. Your mother and father will let you know the world is a scary place as a result of worry controls. However the world shouldn’t be a scary place,” he stated.

Photograph by Alaska Well being Mission South Sudan
APHSS desires to maintain doing the appropriate factor whereas working within the margins of struggling that Trump’s administration widened with its cuts.
Wells are being constructed quick, however not quick sufficient to maintain up with demand. Non-public donors are APHSS’s solely contributors, and 90% of the funds they obtain are spent on their packages in South Sudan. Todd Hardesty, the manager director of APHSS, stated final fiscal 12 months, they’d raised simply $1.2 million. This 12 months, they’ve raised simply $830,000. (Hardesty has spent his personal cash, too: He simply ordered supplies for 10 flood-resilient platforms, 10 extra water wells and two water yards. They’re set to be delivered someday in December.)
Within the face of, and regardless of the challenges, Kapla is aware of till AHPSS returns subsequent 12 months, the struggling doesn’t cease.
“Youngsters are youngsters all around the world. These youngsters deserve to not die,” he stated. “I maintain coming again right here as a result of they deserve to not undergo. There’s extra work to do, and I want extra folks would do it.”










