Humanitarian actors in Sudan face increasing difficulty directing aid to those in need after the U.S. cut funding for a radio station broadcasting phone-in updates from civilians in-country.

Date: 6/26

Region: Africa

Country: Sudan

Topic: Refugees & Displacement, Governance & Rights

Policy Lens: Security & Resilience

Entry Type: Secondary Effect

Additional Context: This information was collected as part of The Aid Report’s original reporting, “‘We lost their voices’: Sudan radio program falls silent after US aid cuts.” This feature story examines how U.S. aid cuts canceled a radio broadcast that had served Sudanese civilians both as a source of real-time safety information and as a channel to report missing persons, food, water, and shelter needs — intelligence that humanitarian responders relied on to direct assistance where it was most needed.

Radio Tamazuj had been supported since 2023 by USAID’s Office of Transition Initiatives covering shortwave broadcast support, monitoring and evaluation capacity, online presence, and fundraising. The latest grant provided the station $425,000 over six months and was expected to be renewed. Without U.S. support, shortwave broadcasts, which cost about $70,000 annually, could not be maintained.

Source: Devex