UN Forced to flee Congo, USAID workers lost everything. They’re suing Trump. - USAID workers based in Kinshasa, the Democratic Republic of Congo, tell a harrowing story of how Trump’s attack on the agency complicated an escape.

By Ben Brasch and Anumita Kaur
February 14, 2025 at 10:02 p.m. EST

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Protesters burn barricades in downtown Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo, on Jan. 28. Fighting between the Congolese military and the M23 rebels, supported by Rwanda, has left many casualties in Goma in the east of the country. (Chris Milosi/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock)

January 28 began as a normal day for “Marcus Doe,” an employee of the U.S. Agency for International Development stationed in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

He boarded a shuttle, bound for his desk at the U.S. Embassy in Kinshasa. His children got on their school bus heading a different direction.

Within hours, everything changed.

Violent political demonstrations erupted and protesters attacked the U.S. Embassy. By the end of the day, most staff were told to evacuate.

But just how they would get back to the United States was unclear: The White House had frozen foreign aid spending about a week earlier and put senior USAID leaders on leave. The agency had stopped paying for employee travel.

Marcus began to feel “an intense sense of panic” that the U.S. government would abandon its workers in Kinshasa. When he finally made it to Washington after a harrowing journey by boat and plane, Marcus was put on administrative leave.

The account is one of more than a dozen from U.S. employees stationed overseas, along with others who work with USAID, included in a lawsuit filed Tuesday by unions representing USAID staff and U.S. Foreign Service officers. They are asking the court for a temporary restraining order directing the White House “to reverse these unlawful actions and to halt any further steps to dissolve the agency.”

The employees and others, who filed their accounts under penalty of perjury, were given pseudonyms to prevent government retaliation, said Lauren Bateman, an attorney representing the American Federation of Government Employees, one of the unions that brought the lawsuit.

“There’s a real fear of reprisal by the administration, and by people like Elon Musk who have specifically named individual federal employees online,” she said.

Earlier this month, Musk posted on X that he and his U.S. DOGE Service staff “spent the weekend feeding USAID into the wood chipper.”

He and Trump have vowed to shut down USAID, a decades-old agency that provides humanitarian aid across the world. The Trump administration has fired, furloughed or placed on leave the vast majority of USAID staff.

Congressional Research Service data shows that more than 6,000 of USAID’s 10,000 employees are based overseas, The Washington Post has reported.

The USAID staffers in Kinshasa made it back to D.C., but they left behind everything from baby books and children’s favorite toys to vehicles and regular access to neonatal care, according to their sworn declarations. One family had to leave behind their dog.

They don’t know whether they will receive a paycheck or reimbursement, or whether they will even have a job now that they have been stranded in an oddly familiar land.

When the Kinshasa group arrived at Dulles International Airport outside Washington, “we did not know how long our Agency would exist,” Marcus wrote. (At the time of his testimony on Feb. 9, Marcus wrote that they had not received any of the payments.)


Police clashed with protesters in the Democratic Republic of Congo's capital on Jan. 28, as violence between the army and M23 rebels escalated in the east. (Video: Reuters)

The pause on foreign aid complicated the entire evacuation. The federal employees wrote that they have spent thousands of dollars fleeing for their lives without knowing whether they will be reimbursed.

“Ruth Doe” wrote that she — a USAID health officer responsible for the management of about $60 million annually — and her spouse had 12½ hours to pack up their lives.

They evacuated early Jan. 29, the same day the U.S. Embassy in Congo increased the travel advisory level from 3 to 4, writing that no one should travel to the country due to “armed conflict, crime, civil unrest, kidnapping, and terrorism.”

Their small bags included essential documents — passports, birth certificates and marriage certificate — along with a couple of pieces of clothing including, crucially, winter jackets. It was sweltering in Congo when they left but wintry in Washington, where they landed about 20 hours later. They left all other assets behind, she wrote, including two vehicles.

That isn’t her biggest concern. Ruth is pregnant. She wrote that she was assured by the State Department that it would help her receive timely prenatal care, including her second-trimester scan. That hadn’t happened as of the time of the lawsuit’s filing, she wrote.

Ruth called five different obstetrics practices in the D.C. area, and the earliest appointment she could get was March 10, she wrote, “which is too late for a second-trimester scan.”

To get the care she needed, she paid out of pocket to fly elsewhere and arranged for a prenatal appointment through family contacts, Ruth wrote.

Those costs are adding up. In one week, Ruth wrote, she has paid $5,000 for necessities.

“Nathan Doe,” a USAID employee who was based in Kinshasa with his wife and their three young children, wrote that he already has accumulated $1,000 in hotel costs. He is a deputy office director for the agency, conducting budget planning and working with USAID staff in Washington to answer congressional inquiries.

Nathan wrote that he sent his family to Michigan to minimize costs. His children are asking him if he has a job. He doesn’t know how to respond.

He isn’t sleeping well and is mentally taxed: “I found myself reluctant to go outside and tried to distance myself from affiliation with USAID as I feared for my safety.”

The freeze has also affected those who work with the agency. “Ulysses Doe” is the chief executive of a business that primarily works with USAID partners.

“When USAID funding froze a few weeks ago, my clients were unable to pay me, in turn making me unable to meet my own expenses,” he wrote. He’s since had to lay off more than 30 consultants. “All of our contracts have been canceled and we do not anticipate receiving any new ones this month,” he said. “If this situation continues, my small business may no longer be able to operate.”

Many of the federal workers who fled Kinshasa still have their mind on work.

“Olivia Doe” has been a USAID employee in Kinshasa since 2023. She works on establishing direct lines of critical minerals, including cobalt, from Congo to the United States.

The country is home to 60 percent of the world’s cobalt. It is extracted through an under-regulated system of about 100,000 miners, who risk their lives to dig hundreds of feet underground with hand tools. The mineral is almost exclusively sent to China, where it is used to make batteries — including some that end up in Apple iPhones, according to an investigation by The Post.

Olivia wrote that her job was to help reduce the country’s dependence on China through increased trade with the United States.

“We have essentially ‘ghosted’ all of our partners and our reputation may forever be tarnished as a result,” she wrote, later adding: “China is ready to immediately jump in and take over.”


Like others, Olivia wrote that she was also on her way to work when her life turned upside down.

“Westerners and cars with diplomatic plates were being targeted” by protesters throwing rocks, she wrote.

About midday, they learned that the house of the USAID mission director in Kinshasa had been looted and videos of the ransacking began circulating on social media.

The unions’ lawsuit is still moving through the courts, and the future is unclear for most of the USAID employees and their families.

On Thursday, U.S. District Judge Carl J. Nichols — a Trump appointee — extended by one week a temporary ban on involuntary evacuations of USAID workers overseas in response to the legal challenge, The Post reported.

Nichols also told Justice Department employees to submit by Friday whether the government would pay for the employees’ other benefits, such as school or car payments, while they are on leave.

Source (Archive)
 
Violent political demonstrations erupted and protesters attacked the U.S. Embassy. By the end of the day, most staff were told to evacuate.

But just how they would get back to the United States was unclear: The White House had frozen foreign aid spending about a week earlier and put senior USAID leaders on leave. The agency had stopped paying for employee travel.

So they chose to stay on after termination and only decided to leave because of a local chimpout. Not my problem.
 
"Who's going to pay for all my stuff now that my job is gone?" Asks the government worker.

Good question. Maybe ask one of the many people who's job got taken away when the government shut everything down for covid.
 
Violent political demonstrations erupted and protesters attacked the U.S. Embassy. By the end of the day, most staff were told to evacuate.

The USAID staffers in Kinshasa made it back to D.C., but they left behind everything from baby books and children’s favorite toys to vehicles and regular access to neonatal care,

Um. Yeah. They evacuated the country and left their stuff behind because of....riots. Even if USAID spending had remained intact, how was more spending going to save their baby books and toys? And government is supposed to pay for private schools for your kids and CARS for you while you are in the US?

And how exactly would USAID have moved you up in terms of getting medical appointments at a doctor's office in the US? And is USAID expected to pay your hotel costs in the United States after you return to the united states?

And DR Congo is SUCH a good FRIEND of the US and you did SUCH a good job that the DR Congo organized a street riot that forced you to evacuate the country.

These people are beyond belief entitled.
 
Ok Kiwis. Can someone explain this situation to me like I'm a retard?

Trump freezes US AID and says bring everyone home.

These people do not packup and leave? Or weren't in the process of doing so?

And then the congo decides to kill all the Americans and steal their shit. So yes, leaving everything behind to evacuate sucks. But why is that Trump's fault?

And how do you spend 5k a week on "necessities" unless we mean replacing a bunch of urgent shit which then makes sense

The writing in this is horrific in the "explain what's happening" way

Also, why the fuck would you a US citizen take your *children* to the fucking Congo if it's that volatile???
 
“Ruth Doe” wrote that she — a USAID health officer responsible for the management of about $60 million annually — and her spouse had 12½ hours to pack up their lives.
They're blaming yet another uprising in a third world country on not getting to keep their jobs? And what would have changed if they did keep their jobs? The protests would go away?

Or if all they want is some flights reimbursed, then yeah sure whatever. Anything to make them shut up and go away.
“We have essentially ‘ghosted’ all of our partners and our reputation may forever be tarnished as a result,” she wrote, later adding: “China is ready to immediately jump in and take over.”
lol no

China would try actually useful things like loans that they'd want to be paid back for rather than charity bullshit being done 100% for free. China will never fill that kind of void.
 
Why were these people there in the first place? Can't think offhand of anything they would be doing there to further US national interests.

Here's the DOGE site.


Here's the latest X feed showing money that's been saved. Some of the shit money has been spent on is ludicrous.

 
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For some context on this, the armed forces of Rwanda and their proxies inside Congo (DRC), launched a successful offensive against the haphazard militia-army of Congo. The leaders of Congo, being rational African leaders responded to this by blaming the damn white man and sending mobs into the streets to attack the embassies of France, Belgium, Rwanda, Uganda, Kenya and the United States. I think at least a couple were burned down. "News" will say that this was some kind of popular protest, but it wasn't. Anything like that happening in the capital would have resulted in the Africans doing it being gunned down by the police/army if it wasn't what the government wanted.

The reaction should be "fuck congo" and to give the Rwandans as many weapons as they want now. You burn our embassy down and we burn you down you stupid ass african garbage. You mess with the US and you pay the price. But I'm not holding my breath for it to happen.

Something like USAID serves no useful purpose in a country like congo. They don't want love or development. The government isn't much more than a big street gang and all it cares about is cold hard cash in exchange for anything anyone extracts from the country.
 
“There’s a real fear of reprisal by the administration, and by people like Elon Musk who have specifically named individual federal employees online,” she said.
Wow getting doxed by someone with a bigger platform than you because you 'stepped out of line' and said the wrong thing? That must feel AWFUL
 
"Forced to flee Congo" well give him a 1 way ticket back if xey want to stay so bad. I'm pretty positive 99.9999% of people who have ever been in the Congo want nothing more than to not be in the Congo. I'll take a skilled negro worker over a government paid faggot any day.
 
Why were these people there in the first place? Can't think offhand of anything they would be doing there to further US national interests.

The national interest in Congo is considered access to certain minerals mined in Congo. The US gets alot of copper from Congo and that is the main part of the economic relationship. US aid spending in Congo is very large but rarely spoken about..

  • Over the past 10 years, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) has provided over $6 billion in humanitarian and development assistance to the DRC. As the largest bilateral donor, working in 25 of the DRC’s 26 provinces, USAID advances health and education, protects the environment, provides life-saving humanitarian assistance, supports economic growth that benefits all citizens, especially marginalized groups, and encourages public institutions to better meet citizens’ needs.


Economic Growth



  • The United States signed a Memorandum of Understanding in October 2023 to develop the Lobito Corridor, which will see the construction of a new 800 km rail line through Angola, the DRC, and Zambia and support infrastructure investment in agriculture, clean energy and clean energy supply chains, digital access and health. These investments will strengthen and diversify supply chains and support our mutual economic and national security. In December 2024, the United States announced over $560 million in new funding for infrastructure projects along the Corridor, bringing the total for U.S. investments to more than $4 billion. 
  • In 2024, the United States launched a country-level strategy to reduce extreme poverty and malnutrition by 20 percent for over 2.5 million Congolese people by 2030, paving the way for $110 million of investment in developing the agrifood system over the next five years.
  • Through years of dedicated effort to address barriers in artisanal mineral supply chains across the DRC, in 2024, USAID supported the first successful export of third-party validated, conflict-free clean artisanal gold from South Kivu to a European refinery. Likewise, USAID signed a $2 million award with the Fair Cobalt Alliance to support the Government of DRC’s efforts to legalize and formalize the artisanal cobalt-copper supply chain to enable artisanal minerals to be legally exported for the first time.
  • USAID’s Gorilla Coffee Alliance activity distributed over 850,000 coffee seedlings to more than 2,100 households in South Kivu province. As a result, coffee farmers generated over $1.8 million in profits by selling directly to international companies such as Nespresso, enabling smallholder farmers to provide for their families and send their children to school.
  • The United States signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the DRC and Zambia to jointly develop a supply chain for electric vehicle batteries. The MOU supports the DRC and Zambia’s goal of building a productive supply chain, from the mine to the assembly line, while also committing to respect international standards to prevent, detect, and take legal action to fight corruption throughout this process.
  • The Academy for Women Entrepreneurs (AWE) – an entrepreneurship program designed to help women grow their businesses – provided guided training, mentorship, and business linkages to 100 women entrepreneurs in five cities across the country. Selected participants increased their knowledge and understanding of business, marketing, finance, and operations, and had opportunities to meet and network with like-minded women to share best practices. In October 2024, 10 participants traveled to Harvard to continue their professional development.
  • USAID facilitated close to $75 million of investments, leveraging $3 million of commercial finance, which supported 27 Congolese micro, small, and medium enterprises. This resulted in the creation of numerous jobs, supporting more dynamic and resilient private sector-led development.
  • USAID supported the establishment of more than 900 Village Savings and Loans Associations in North and South Kivu, helping more than 24,000 community members access improved economic opportunities.


Education



  • The Embassy operate six American Spaces around the country – two in Kinshasa, as well as in Goma, Kisangani, Lubumbashi, and Matadi – in partnership with Congolese educational institutions. These resource centers offer internet, books, and regular events focused on personal and professional development. All resources and activities are completely free of charge.
  • As the largest bilateral education sector donor in the DRC, USAID provides learning services to over 350,000 children living in conflict zones. In addition, the teaching and learning materials developed by USAID are being used in national languages throughout the country.
  • The U.S. supports 14 financial institutions in the DRC to develop loans for low-fee, non-state schools, mobilizing $13.4 million in private capital for school fees and improvements. These loans funded classroom expansions, improving access to education for 590,000 learners.
  • To increase access to quality education nationwide from the pre-primary level through secondary school, USAID serves as the Coordination Agency for the Global Partnership for Education (GPE) to support a $135 million grant. As a result, hundreds of thousands of Congolese children are on the path to obtain a quality education.
  • In the last two decades over 1,100 disadvantaged Congolese teens have benefited from the Embassy’s free English Access program. We recently launched a new, two-year, 360-hour program of English, civics, American culture, technology, and service learning for 100 teenage high school students in four diverse locations throughout Kinshasa.
  • As part of our partnership with the Congo-American Language Institute (CALI), the Embassy regularly provides advanced professional development in person and online to CALI faculty.


Environment



  • Over the past 25 years, USAID, through its Central Africa Regional Program for the Environment (CARPE), has invested over $650 million to preserve the Congo Basin. Through diverse partnerships and capacity building at the local, national, and regional levels, CARPE supports sustainable forest conservation and management, biodiversity conservation, and climate change mitigation.
  • CARPE has improved the management of 23 Community Forest Concessions, which span over 400,000 hectares, helping local communities benefit from their forests through improved management practices and economic opportunities.
  • U.S. government conversation efforts have significantly reduced poaching of key species in protected areas. For example, elephant poaching has decreased significantly, from 100 in 2013, to just three in 2024.
  • The Embassy’s first annual Congo Basin Conclave gathered over 100 environmental activists and experts from the DRC, Cameroon, Congo-Brazzaville, Equatorial Guinea, and Gabon to share best practices, exchange experiences, and develop local solutions to local problems across the region. Congo Basin Conclave participants have already formed their own cross-border association, with plans to create local community projects to preserve the Congo Basin.
Governance & Democracy



  • USAID was the largest donor to the DRC’s 2023 election cycle, providing almost $24 million to improve transparency, strengthen electoral administration, and empower civil society through civic education on peaceful participation. USAID support mobilized more than 8,000 election observers to improve electoral accountability, voter registration drives, and partnership with the national electoral commission (CENI), which helped lead to the registration of 43 million voters.
  • USAID invested $13 million to strengthen the judicial system and trained 2,500 newly appointed judges to promote reforms.
  • To promote a sustainable, unbiased, and transparent media environment, USAID worked with 10 community radio stations to increase average monthly revenues from $445 in 2020 to $7,350 in 2024.


Humanitarian Assistance



  • Over the last six years, USAID invested around $3 billion in humanitarian assistance for people affected by natural disasters and conflict, providing life-saving food, health, nutrition, protection, and water sanitation and hygiene services across the country, including in conflict-affected areas of eastern DRC. In 2023, USAID reached over 5.3 million people with food assistance activities.
  • USAID Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (WASH) programs and Resilience for Food Security activities reached nearly 1.2 million people in the eastern DRC, as well as in Kasai Oriental and Tanganyika provinces. These activities are ensuring access to safe drinking water, improved sanitation facilities and latrines – including in schools and health centers – as well as improved agricultural management practices.
  • When catastrophic floods struck North Ubangi and Tshopo provinces in January 2024, USAID responded immediately, providing relief to around 45,000 people, strengthening community preparedness and response to natural disasters.
  • USAID provides access to medical, psychosocial, and legal services for gender-based violence (GBV) survivors, as well as child protection services. Over the past five years, these initiatives have reached more than 850,000 people with GBV prevention, risk mitigation, and response interventions. Across five critical health zones with the most pressing needs in the eastern DRC, USAID has developed a network of lawyers and paralegals trained in supporting and helping GBV survivors to navigate the DRC’s complex legal system.


Health



  • USAID is the largest bilateral donor to the DRC’s health sector, providing lifesaving treatment for over 11 million people in 2024 for diseases such as tuberculosis, HIV, diarrhea, pneumonia, and malaria. In addition, more than 100,000 people gained access to safe drinking water.
  • The Embassy’s Centers for Disease Control (CDC) office provides technical and financial assistance critical to strengthening disease surveillance, bolstering regional health security capacity, and preventing pandemics. With U.S. support, the DRC has contained six Ebola outbreaks in the past six years.
  • The United States bolstered the DRC’s response to the 2024 mpox epidemic, donating over 300,000 vaccine doses and providing approximately $15 million to support risk communication and community outreach, surveillance and detection, laboratory capacity, and care and treatment.
  • The U.S. President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) has provided more than $900 million for HIV prevention, care, and treatment programs in the DRC since 2003.  PEPFAR has provided HIV testing services to more than 5 million Congolese and placed around 200,000 people on lifesaving antiretroviral treatment.  
  • USAID, along with Global Fund, is the leading supporter of the national program to eliminate tuberculosis (TB) as a major public health challenge in the DRC. Largely with USAID support, approximately 80 percent of TB cases were notified in 2024, including over 32,000 children, who could seek out qualified and appropriate care.
  • Since 2010, the President’s Malaria Initiative (PMI) has provided over $600 million to the DRC in malaria programming to support the country’s efforts to prevent and control malaria, with activities covering around 40 percent of the DRC population across nine provinces. Through PMI, USAID is supporting the planning, delivery, and monitoring of vaccine deployment for over 3.5 million doses of a malaria vaccine, introduced in the DRC in 2024 across 13 provinces.
  • USAID has supported polio eradication efforts in the DRC since 1998, working closely with the GDRC, to support surveillance, routine immunization, and polio campaign initiatives, through technical, financial, and logistical support. The United States has contributed over $100 million to this fight, making it one of the leading donors in the fight against polio in the DRC.
  • USAID procures around $80 million of essential medicines and other health commodities annually, and supports supply chain reforms that have significantly improved access to high quality health services to the most vulnerable populations.
  • With technical assistance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control, the DRC created the National Public Health Institute (NPHI) in 2022, which has emerged as a cornerstone for the country’s health security initiatives. This led to the establishment of Emergency Operations Centers (COUSP), which enhance the DRC’s capacity to prepare for, detect, and respond to public health emergencies, from infectious disease outbreaks to natural disasters.
  • CDC also supports the Field Epidemiology Training Program (FETP), which equips health professionals with advanced skills to effectively detect, prevent, and control epidemic-prone diseases. To date, the FETP has trained 806 field epidemiologists. FETP graduates and residents now play a vital role in outbreak preparedness and response – more than 80% of health zones in the DRC are covered by FETP Frontline graduates.
Peace and Security



  • The United States leads efforts to equip and train police using a community policing approach.  We also build infrastructure such as police stations and water wells open to the surrounding communities.  In 2023, we trained over 600 police officers around the country and built 19 police stations.
  • The Embassy’s Office of Security Cooperation funds annual military education exchanges and engineering training for FARDC officers and soldiers. Multiple FARDC generals have participated in these programs.
  • The Embassy supports the professional development of the Congolese military through English Language Labs, which we set up at the Officer Academy in Kananga, NCO Academy in Kitona, and Superior Military Schools (GESM).
  • In Tanganyika province, USAID enhanced social cohesion and worked to resolve hundreds of conflicts, particularly between the Bantu and Twa people, through the establishment of 18 local peace committees, 30 youth groups, and 40 women’s groups.


People-to-People Ties



  • The U.S. government supports the development of young leaders in the DRC through the Mandela Washington Fellowship program, which provides leadership training, professional internships in the United States, and networking opportunities. This program aims to strengthen the skills of influential young people, thereby promoting economic growth and the consolidation of democratic institutions in Africa, while strengthening ties between the American and Congolese people.
  • In September 2023, the Department of State extended reciprocity for tourist and student visas for Congolese nationals from three months to two years, allowing DRC citizens with B1/B2 or F visas to travel to the United States as often as they wish over a two-year period.
 
For some context on this, the armed forces of Rwanda and their proxies inside Congo (DRC), launched a successful offensive against the haphazard militia-army of Congo. The leaders of Congo, being rational African leaders responded to this by blaming the damn white man and sending mobs into the streets to attack the embassies of France, Belgium, Rwanda, Uganda, Kenya and the United States. I think at least a couple were burned down. "News" will say that this was some kind of popular protest, but it wasn't. Anything like that happening in the capital would have resulted in the Africans doing it being gunned down by the police/army if it wasn't what the government wanted.

The reaction should be "fuck congo" and to give the Rwandans as many weapons as they want now. You burn our embassy down and we burn you down you stupid ass african garbage. You mess with the US and you pay the price. But I'm not holding my breath for it to happen.

Something like USAID serves no useful purpose in a country like congo. They don't want love or development. The government isn't much more than a big street gang and all it cares about is cold hard cash in exchange for anything anyone extracts from the country.
I also found an oddly more coherent article on this from CNN. Archive here https://archive.is/8xaCW (url also looks like they mentioned trump then changed the headline later)

So tldr between that and your post:
Congo chimps out on all white man country embassies.

Naturally, evacuating in a violent situation is not easy and of course risk and inconvenience happen.

Apparently the suit against trump is for chaos in the evacuation and not paying for a ton of things once arriving in the USA. I have no idea what evacuated US citizens are entitled to, nor what U SAID was paying for directly vs these peoples salary. So I can't comment how reasonable any complaint is.

I still say anyone living in a dangerous country as a Westerner to "help" should really fucking not be bringing wives, kids, husbands whatever in tow. You also should have better sense than to get pregnant in that kinda situation. Which has less to do with law and acting entitled and more to do with having an ounce of common sense and knowing that nobody gives a shit and even if uncle sam *did* come to save my butt my butt shouldn't expect it to be easy or safe if shit hits the fan in rural niggerstan.
 
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