U.S. aid cuts leave food for millions moldering in storage
Food rations that could supply 3.5 million people for a month are moldering in warehouses around the world because of U.S. aid cuts and risk becoming unusable, according to five people familiar with the situation.






















REUTERS
Food aid is stored at Edesia Nutrition warehouse in North Kingstown, Rhode Island, May 15.REUTERS
Food aid is stored at Edesia Nutrition warehouse in North Kingstown, Rhode Island, May 15.REUTERS
Workers pack food aid into boxes to be delivered all over the world at the Edesia Nutrition facility in North Kingstown, Rhode Island, May 15.REUTERS
Food aid is packaged into boxes to be delivered all over the world at the Edesia Nutrition facility in North Kingstown, Rhode Island, May 15.REUTERS
Food aid ispackaged into boxes to be delivered all over the world at the Edesia Nutrition facility in North Kingstown, Rhode Island, May 15.REUTERS
A worker holds an aid food packet to be packed in a box and delivered abroad, at the Edesia Nutrition facility in North Kingstown, Rhode Island, May 15.REUTERS
A stack of USAID-aided medical supplies is seen outside Bauchi State Drugs and Medical Consumables Management Agency central medical store in Bauchi State, Nigeria, May 7.REUTERS
Commuters and motorists are seen outside an access gate into Bauchi State, Nigeria, May 8.REUTERS
Rashida Musa, 29, tends to her sick child who was sent home from the hospital due to malnutrition following the aid cut by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) in Tudun Gambo, Bauchi State, Nigeria, May 8.REUTERS
People transfer medical supplies into the Bauchi State Drugs and Medical Consumables Management Agency central medical store in Bauchi State, Nigeria, May 7.REUTERS
Health care workers takes the vitals of a malnourished child in Tudun Gambo Primary Health Care Center, following the aid cut by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), in Tudun Gambo, Bauchi State, Nigeria, May 8.