Red Cross cuts budget by 17%, will prioritize frontline conflict zones
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The International Committee of the Red Cross will implement a 17% budget reduction for 2026 while prioritizing humanitarian operations in active conflict areas. The organization plans to eliminate approximately 2,900 positions while maintaining frontline operations in regions including Sudan, Ukraine, and Gaza amid declining donor funding.
The International Committee of the Red Cross has announced significant budget reductions for 2026 while pledging to prioritize humanitarian operations in active conflict zones despite financial constraints. The organization’s Assembly approved a budget of CHF 1.8 billion ($2.2 billion) for the coming year, representing a 17% decrease from 2025 levels, reflecting what the ICRC describes as a necessary response to declining donor support and escalating global conflicts.
ICRC President Mirjana Spoljaric warned of “a dangerous convergence of escalating armed conflicts, significant cuts to aid funding and a systemic tolerance for grave breaches of international humanitarian law.” She emphasized that while “the ICRC remains committed to working on the front lines of conflict, where few others can operate,” financial realities are forcing difficult decisions to ensure continued delivery of critical assistance to vulnerable populations in conflict areas.
The budget restructuring will result in the elimination of approximately 2,900 positions across the organization, with approximately one-third of these reductions achieved through voluntary departures or leaving vacancies unfilled. Despite these cuts, the ICRC plans to maintain its field operations in major conflict zones including Sudan, Israel and the occupied territories, Ukraine, and the Democratic Republic of Congo, where its neutral intermediary status provides unique access to frontline communities.
Spoljaric issued a stark warning about the growing disparity between military spending and humanitarian funding, urging governments to “match rising military spending with support for conflict prevention and humanitarian protection.” She noted that “as defence budgets surge, states must also put more effort and resources into preventing conflicts, defending the rules of war and providing humanitarian relief,” cautioning that failure to do so risks “a world of ever more and greater suffering.”
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Titles :conflictsfront linesFundsICRC
