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Takeaways from the AP's report on the impact of aid cuts on Rohingya children in Bangladesh

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Takeaways from the AP's report on the impact of aid cuts on Rohingya children in Bangladesh
News

News

Takeaways from the AP's report on the impact of aid cuts on Rohingya children in Bangladesh

2025-12-17 13:31 Last Updated At:12-18 00:40

UKHIYA, Bangladesh (AP) — 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:

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.

The U.S. cuts, along with funding reductions from other countries, also crippled child protection programs, along with healthcare, nutrition and sanitation services.

The school closures had a devastating impact on children. With their learning opportunities gone, hundreds of underage girls were forced into unwanted marriages, many of which quickly turned abusive. Scores of children as young as 10 were forced into manual labor. With no safe space to play or learn, children were left to wander the labyrinthine camps, making them increasingly easy targets for kidnappers, traffickers and armed militant groups.

Between January and mid-November, reported cases of abduction and kidnapping more than quadrupled over the same time period last year, to 560 children, according to UNICEF. And there has been an eightfold increase in reports of recruitment and use of children for training and support roles in the camps by armed groups, with 817 children affected. The actual number of cases is likely higher due to underreporting, the agency said.

Verified cases of child marriage, which the U.N. defines as the union of children under age 18, rose by 21% and verified child labor cases by 17% in the year to September, compared to the same time period last year. Those statistics are likely to be a significant undercount, says Patrick Halton, a child protection manager for UNICEF.

“With the funding cuts, we had to downscale a lot in terms of the education,” Halton says. “It’s meant that children have not necessarily had things to do, and we’ve therefore seen this rise in children being married, children being in child labor.”

In a statement to the AP, the State Department said the U.S. has provided more than $168 million to the Rohingya since the beginning of Trump’s term, although data from the U.N.’s financial tracking service show the U.S. contribution in 2025 is $156 million.

The State Department said it had “advanced burden sharing and improved efficiency” in the Rohingya response, resulting in 11 countries increasing their funding by more than 10 percent year on year, collectively contributing $72 million.

“The Trump Administration continues to pursue the diplomatic efforts to encourage additional countries to help shoulder the burden,” the statement said.

The department did not respond to AP’s request for evidence that the U.S. had any influence on other countries’ funding decisions for the Rohingya response.

Hasina, who was 16 when she was married off after her school closed, is now trapped with a husband who she says beats and sexually abuses her. She daydreams daily of school, where she was a whiz at English and hoped to become a teacher. Now, she is confined largely to her shelter, cooking and cleaning and waiting with dread for the next beating. The AP is withholding her full name to protect her from retaliation by her husband.

“I dreamed of being something, of working for the community,” Hasina says softly. “My life is destroyed.”

—-

Contact AP’s global investigative team at Investigative@ap.org or https://www.ap.org/tips/.

Rohingya refugee 13-year-old Rahamot Ullah, his eye bloodied from a bamboo stick that pierced it 10 days earlier while slogging through sewage, speaks to The Associated Press inside the Rohingya refugee camp in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, Friday, Nov. 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Mahmud Hossain Opu)

Rohingya refugee 13-year-old Rahamot Ullah, his eye bloodied from a bamboo stick that pierced it 10 days earlier while slogging through sewage, speaks to The Associated Press inside the Rohingya refugee camp in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, Friday, Nov. 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Mahmud Hossain Opu)

ADELAIDE, Australia (AP) — Nathan Lyon took two wickets in his first over to move past Glenn McGrath for second place on Australia’s all-time bowling list as England teetered on 132-5 at tea on Day 2 of the third Ashes cricket test.

Australia resumed Thursday at 326-8 and was all out for 371 as Jofra Archer dismissed Mitchell Starc for a well-made 54 and No. 11 Lyon to complete a five-wicket haul.

England was coasting at 37 without loss in reply until returning Australia skipper Pat Cummins took his first wicket of the series to dismiss Zak Crawley (9), triggering a slide of three wickets in 15 deliveries.

Offspinner Lyon was introduced for the 10th over and had immediate success with two wickets in four balls to remove Ollie Pope (3) and Ben Duckett (29) as England slumped to 42-3.

He got Pope to play forward to a ball that turned, pushing a catch to a diving Josh Inglis at midwicket, to equal retired paceman McGrath's career haul of 563 test wickets.

Lyon struck again on the last ball of that over, enticing Duckett to play the wrong line to a drifting delivery that took out the England's openers off stump. TV coverage showed McGrath in a stadium commentary booth pretending to throw a chair around in mock annoyance.

Only the great Shane Warne — with 708 wickets in 145 tests from 1992-2007 — is above Lyon on the Australia's list of test wicket-takers. It was a huge return for Lyon, who was omitted from the lineup that won the second test in Brisbane for a 2-0 series lead.

England needs victory in Adelaide to have any chance of reclaiming the Ashes, and will need a big innings from skipper Ben Stokes to achieve it.

He was unbeaten on 19 at the end of the middle session, recovering after being hit on the side of the helmet as he tried to turn his head away from a short-pitch ball from Mitchell Starc that was traveling at 145 kph (90 mph).

Cummins dismissed Joe Root (19), bringing Stokes to the crease with the total at 71-4 after the lunch interval. Cameron Green struck on his third delivery, getting the edge of Harry Brook’s bat with a ball that moved away from the right-hander, ending a 56-run stand for the fifth wicket just before the tea interval.

Brook scored 45 from 63 before he was out in the 37th over, adding just one run after getting a reprieve when he was given out caught behind off Lyon's bowling but successfully reviewed the decision with the TV umpire.

Archer picked up the first wicket of the third test, two more in the first over after lunch later Wednesday and the last two on Day 2.

Starc, who was unbeaten on 33 overnight, quickly raced to his half-century, plundering four boundaries in the first 10 deliveries of the morning: two slashing cuts in the first over from Archer and two more to wayward deliveries from Brydon Carse.

Starc reached 50 with a single, hit the first ball of Archer's next over to the boundary but then the England paceman bowled him with a delivery that angled in from around the stumps.

The last-wicket pair added 23 runs before Archer trapped Lyon (9) lbw, leaving Boland unbeaten on 14 from 21 deliveries.

Archer returned 5-53 from 20.2 overs for his fourth five-wicket haul in test cricket, and third in the Ashes.

England needed to bat all day to revive its chances in this five-test series. The hot conditions should have been a help to England's cause, particularly with the Australians in the field and the temperature hitting 40C (104F).

AP cricket: https://apnews.com/hub/cricket

Australia's Nathan Lyon, left, celebrates with teammate Mitchell Starc after dismissing England's Ben Duckett during play on day two of the third Ashes cricket test between England and Australia in Adelaide, Australia, Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025. (AP Photo/James Elsby)

Australia's Nathan Lyon, left, celebrates with teammate Mitchell Starc after dismissing England's Ben Duckett during play on day two of the third Ashes cricket test between England and Australia in Adelaide, Australia, Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025. (AP Photo/James Elsby)

Australia's Nathan Lyon, left, celebrates with teammate Mitchell Starc after dismissing England's Ben Duckett during play on day two of the third Ashes cricket test between England and Australia in Adelaide, Australia, Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025. (AP Photo/James Elsby)

Australia's Nathan Lyon, left, celebrates with teammate Mitchell Starc after dismissing England's Ben Duckett during play on day two of the third Ashes cricket test between England and Australia in Adelaide, Australia, Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025. (AP Photo/James Elsby)

Australia's Mitchell Starc bats during play on day two of the third Ashes cricket test between England and Australia in Adelaide, Australia, Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025. (AP Photo/James Elsby)

Australia's Mitchell Starc bats during play on day two of the third Ashes cricket test between England and Australia in Adelaide, Australia, Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025. (AP Photo/James Elsby)

England's Jofra Archer, centre, is congratulated by teammates after taking five wickets during play on day two of the third Ashes cricket test between England and Australia in Adelaide, Australia, Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025. (AP Photo/James Elsby)

England's Jofra Archer, centre, is congratulated by teammates after taking five wickets during play on day two of the third Ashes cricket test between England and Australia in Adelaide, Australia, Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025. (AP Photo/James Elsby)

England's Jofra Archer bowls a delivery during play on day one of the third Ashes cricket test between England and Australia at the Adelaide Oval in Adelaide, Australia, Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2025. (AP Photo/James Elsby)

England's Jofra Archer bowls a delivery during play on day one of the third Ashes cricket test between England and Australia at the Adelaide Oval in Adelaide, Australia, Wednesday, Dec. 17, 2025. (AP Photo/James Elsby)

England's Jofra Archer reacts after taking five wickets during play on day two of the third Ashes cricket test between England and Australia in Adelaide, Australia, Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025. (AP Photo/James Elsby)

England's Jofra Archer reacts after taking five wickets during play on day two of the third Ashes cricket test between England and Australia in Adelaide, Australia, Thursday, Dec. 18, 2025. (AP Photo/James Elsby)

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