The Swiss voice in the world since 1935

Red Cross to cut 1,800 jobs worldwide

ICRC HQ
The Geneva-based humanitarian organisation has been grappling with a serious financial crisis. © Keystone / Salvatore Di Nolfi

The Geneva-based International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) is carrying out larger than expected cuts to humanitarian staff and offices around the world.

The humanitarian organisation, which has been struggling with a big funding gap for some time, announcedExternal link on Tuesday that cost-cutting measures this year would result in 1,800 job losses at headquarters and in delegations worldwide, and the closure of at least 26 of its 350 global sites. The ICRC had initially reported 1,500 job cuts and 20 closed sites.

But the impact could be larger. The total number of layoffs does not include other staff who may be affected due to fewer global assignments and a hiring freeze for certain jobs. Swiss public radio, RTS, said this could affect around 3,000 people.

+ Woman to head Red Cross for the first time

Delegations in Mauritania, Kuala Lumpur and Greece will close. In addition, the organisation’s presence in Dakar, Nairobi, Amman, Bangkok, Panama and another 21 locations will be “significantly scaled back”.

Other ICRC locations will also be “substantially reduced”, where, for example, the area can be covered by another ICRC office, or where other humanitarian or development partners can take over, the ICRC said.

“These changes reflect a stronger focus on the ICRC’s core activities, such as programmes in hard-to-reach, frontline, and contested areas. It also includes efforts directly connected to our mandate to promote international humanitarian law and uphold the rights of people living through armed conflict,” it said.

+ Read more on the ICRC’s current role in Ukraine

The organisation has been grappling with a serious financial crisis. It had previously warned that it was facing a shortfall in its desired budget of CHF2.79 billion ($2.99 billion) for 2023. On March 30, ICRC’s governing board approved cuts of CHF430 million for this year and the beginning of next.

Fundraising is particularly difficult. ICRC director Robert Mardini told media in March that there were “fewer donations for humanitarian aid in general” and that the Russia-Ukraine conflict had led to crises in other parts of the world “being forgotten”.

Of the ten most important operations of the ICRC, which celebrates its 160th anniversary this year, only Ukraine has a positive funding outlook, Mardini told RTS. All other operations (Afghanistan, Syria, Yemen, South Sudan, Somalia, Iraq, Democratic Republic of Congo, Ethiopia, Nigeria) are underfunded, he said.

The ICRC employs around 20,000 people across the world.

Popular Stories

News

Safra Sarasin and a former asset manager sentenced

More

Swiss Politics

Safra Sarasin private bank and former asset manager sentenced

This content was published on The Office of the Attorney General of Switzerland has fined private bank J. Safra Sarasin CHF3.5 million for aggravated money laundering. A former bank employee received a six-month suspended prison sentence.

Read more: Safra Sarasin private bank and former asset manager sentenced
1MDB affair: JPMorgan to pay CHF 270 million

More

Swiss Politics

JPMorgan to pay CHF270 million to settle 1MDB claims

This content was published on JPMorgan Chase has agreed to pay CHF270 million to the Malaysian government to settle all issues related to its role in the 1MDB financial scandal.

Read more: JPMorgan to pay CHF270 million to settle 1MDB claims
Philippe Lazzarini has overseen UNRWA since 2020.

More

Foreign Affairs

UNRWA boss Lazzarini to step down in March 2026

This content was published on Philippe Lazzarini will step down as head of the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestinian Refugees (UNRWA) at the end of his term in March, he announced on Thursday.

Read more: UNRWA boss Lazzarini to step down in March 2026
Gösgen NPP outage darkens profit prospects for Axpo and Alpiq

More

Swiss Politics

Outage extended at Swiss nuclear plant

This content was published on The Gösgen nuclear power plant in northwestern Switzerland will be out of service for six months. It has not been connected to the grid since late May.

Read more: Outage extended at Swiss nuclear plant

In compliance with the JTI standards

More: SWI swissinfo.ch certified by the Journalism Trust Initiative

You can find an overview of ongoing debates with our journalists here . Please join us!

If you want to start a conversation about a topic raised in this article or want to report factual errors, email us at english@swissinfo.ch.

SWI swissinfo.ch - a branch of Swiss Broadcasting Corporation SRG SSR

SWI swissinfo.ch - a branch of Swiss Broadcasting Corporation SRG SSR