An initiative that trained journalists across 13 community radio stations in North Kivu was forced to let go of five employees, or nearly one-third of its staff after U.S. aid cuts.
Date: 6/26
Region: Africa
Country: Democratic Republic of the Congo
Topic: Governance & Rights
Policy Lens: Security & Resilience
Entry Type: Operational Impact
Additional Context: This information was collected as part of The Aid Report’s original reporting, “In eastern DRC, Goma's aid economy unravels.” This feature story examines how the effects of aid cuts extend far beyond NGOs. As programs close and international staff leave, families are losing income, apartments are sitting empty, and businesses are closing.
This information was provided by Jacques Vagheni Kakule, coordinator of CORACON, or North Kivu Community Radio and Television Collective. He said his NGO was forced to scale back after the suspension of a U.S.-funded program. The initiative trained journalists across 13 community radio stations and supported programming focused on social cohesion, violence prevention, and economic recovery. CORACON typically received about $300,000 annually through the project. Kakule worries about the staff that he was forced to let go of due to the aid cuts.
Source: Devex

