In August, I traveled to Kakuma, Kenya, to attempt to perceive what occurred when the U.S. reduce off meals to the world’s third-largest refugee camp.
Quickly after President Donald Trump froze international support on his first day in workplace, my colleague Brett Murphy and I started listening to from authorities consultants. We realized that regardless of specific guarantees from Secretary of State Marco Rubio that meals and different life-saving care would proceed through the administration’s evaluate of international support, applications had been shutting down, placing tens of millions of lives in danger. I’ve coated well being within the U.S. and overseas for 15 years, and Brett has coated each the State Division and public well being within the U.S. Brett and I teamed up, interviewing dozens of presidency officers and support staff, and pouring over reams of inside authorities paperwork. Then, we traveled to Kakuma (and South Sudan) to see for ourselves how these insurance policies had been affecting folks.
In an investigation we printed final week, we wrote about how food rations were slashed throughout the camp of greater than 308,000 folks. We realized first-hand how the Trump administration’s resolution to withhold funding for the World Meals Program’s operations in Kenya led kids to starve and compelled hundreds of households to make impossible decisions. One of many teams hit hardest by the cuts was pregnant girls.
We arrived on a scorching, dry day in August with Kenyan photographer Brian Otieno and went straight to the camp’s solely hospital, which is run by the Worldwide Rescue Committee. The one doctor working the hospital’s wards on the time, Dr. Kefa Otieno (no relation to the photographer), gave us a tour.
As we entered the maternity unit, a big yellow room with round 45 beds, nearly all of them occupied, the physician defined that the help cuts had been inflicting an epidemic of life-threatening being pregnant issues. Ravenous girls had been giving delivery to untimely infants. Even those that made it to time period had been usually dangerously underweight. The hospital was understaffed, and other people within the camp had been so anemic that they couldn’t get sufficient blood donations. Otieno had twice donated himself whereas he was midsurgery so as to save a pregnant girl’s life.

Off one aspect of the maternity ward was a small, stark room with a bench alongside one wall and two wheeled, steel beds. Otieno known as it the kangaroo room. Inside had been mothers and untimely infants too small to securely return dwelling. The hospital had no useful incubators, so medical employees ascribe to a way known as kangaroo mom care, the place mothers maintain their infants towards their pores and skin to maintain them heat and assist them develop.
There, we met Monica and her child Mary, and Binti and her son Nuru. Each girls had tough pregnancies that the medical employees ascribed to malnourishment. Each had given delivery prematurely to underweight infants. And after we visited, each had been trapped within the room for weeks, desperately attempting to assist their infants achieve weight.
Monica, 21, is humorous, with a dry, sharp wit. She met her husband Ramazani at church, when she was singing within the choir. They’d dated for a few years earlier than she discovered she was pregnant in December final 12 months. They had been each scared and excited to be mother and father, however the timing of the being pregnant was unfortunate: As Monica’s stomach grew, meals rations shrank.
Monica started battling anemia and hypertension. Otieno informed me the roots of those issues had been undernourishment.
Monica doesn’t keep in mind going into labor. Ramazani discovered her collapsed on the ground when he returned from one of many camp’s group showers. She was having seizures, and it took a couple of hours earlier than they obtained her to the hospital. Medical employees rushed her in for an emergency cesarean part; she was in such dire form that employees thought they had been going to lose each Monica and her child. After we met three weeks later, Monica nonetheless struggled to talk, her tongue contorted and swollen from biting on it for thus lengthy through the seizures.
Nonetheless, she was capable of inform me about her being pregnant, together with a time when she was about 5 months alongside and hadn’t eaten for 2 days. She went to a close-by vendor to beg for a samosa on mortgage, promising to pay him again later within the day. She then hid in her home for a number of days, pretending nobody was dwelling when he got here by to gather the few cents she owed. (Ramazani ultimately paid him again.)
At age 28, Nuru was Binti’s third youngster. She’d had no issues along with her earlier pregnancies, however with Nuru, she barely gained weight. Binti had come to Kakuma in 2016 after fleeing violence within the Democratic Republic of Congo. When she first arrived on the camp, there was all the time meals.
“I had different kinds of stress, however by no means with meals,” she mentioned one afternoon whereas sitting on the ground stitching curtains for the sparse hospital room.
However throughout this being pregnant, she mentioned, meals was all she thought of. She was so anemic and hungry that she resorted to consuming clay, digging out the highest layer of earth to get to the cleaner soil beneath, and charcoal. Her chart confirmed she gained fewer than 10 kilos throughout her complete being pregnant. Her child, Nuru, was born at 33 weeks, weighing about 3.5 kilos.
Otieno wished the infants to weigh 4 kilos earlier than they went dwelling, sufficient that they’d have a preventing likelihood towards an infection. Hospital employees put the infants on a scale each two days, and earlier than every weigh in, Binti would get herself puffed up: “I can really feel it, immediately is the day we’re going dwelling,” she mentioned one afternoon. Monica tried not to consider what the dimensions would say. Each she and Mary had dropped weight within the previous weeks. After a lot loss, she didn’t need to get her hopes up.
However, whereas Binti and Monica had been determined to get out of the hospital and residential to their households — Binti to her different kids and Monica to her two youthful siblings — leaving would come at a price. If and after they went, they’d be reduce off from meals once more.
On the hospital, employees introduced round three easy meals each day, sometimes lentils and rice or sorghum porridge. Outdoors the hospital, they’d have virtually nothing.
Going through dwindling provides, WFP, which gives meals for the camp, made the dramatic resolution to solely give rations to about half the camp’s residents in August. Households had been positioned into teams primarily based on tough estimates of want. Regardless that Monica and Binti had been caught within the hospital exactly as a result of they didn’t have sufficient to eat, Binti and Ramazani had each been positioned in classes that meant they’d get no meals. Monica and her youthful siblings had been set to obtain simply 420 energy a day every.

Within the meantime, Binti and Monica bonded: They informed tales and held each other’s infants whereas they showered or went to the lavatory. They took turns sleeping on the bench so the infants might have one of many beds. Monica and Ramazani, who spent virtually each night time on the hospital, made positive {that a} tiny copy of the Bible was all the time positioned subsequent to child Mary’s head.

One Saturday morning, Otieno got here in to weigh the infants. Binti bounced forwards and backwards on her ft like a boxer making ready for a bout. Nuru weighed in at slightly below 4 kilos. Binti raised her arms in victory: They may go dwelling.
Then it was child Mary’s flip. “This child is refusing to achieve weight,” Otieno mumbled, attempting to nonetheless her wiggly legs to get an correct measurement. Mary had gained 10 grams, equal to two-thirds of a tablespoon of water. After days of shedding weight, it was maybe a small victory, however not one which Monica would have fun. She picked up Mary, held her towards her chest, and sat again down on the bench.
I requested Monica about her hopes for the long run. She mentioned all she wished was to be resettled within the U.S. along with her siblings and Mary, so they might all go to high school and have sufficient to eat. “Fill your pocket book with that,” she mentioned. “It’s the one factor I would like.”
On the finish of September, the administration gave WFP’s Kenya operations $66 million, 40% lower than the U.S. gave in 2024 and 9 months into the 12 months. WFP has mentioned the funds can be sufficient to supply meals to the camp via March, although rations are nonetheless far beneath what humanitarians think about the each day minimal of energy.
In response to a sequence of questions, a senior State Division official informed us that the U.S. nonetheless provides WFP tons of of tens of millions a 12 months and the administration is shifting to investments that can higher serve each the U.S. and key allies like Kenya over time.
The official additionally mentioned that the Workplace of Administration and Finances, not the State Division, has final authority to approve new international support cash. After we requested OMB concerning the delays, communications director Rachel Cauley informed us: “That’s completely false. And that’s not even how this course of works.” She didn’t make clear what was false.

























