The department decided to destroy the contraceptives because it could not sell them to any “eligible buyers”, in part because of US laws and rules that prohibit sending US aid to organizations that provide abortion services, counsel people about the procedure or advocate for the right to it overseas, according to the state department spokesperson.
Most of the contraceptives have less than 70% of their shelf life left before they expire, the spokesperson said, and rebranding and selling the contraceptives could cost several million dollars. However, the aide who visited the warehouse said that the earliest expiration date they saw on the contraceptives was 2027, and that two-thirds of the contraceptives did not have any
USAID labels that would need to be rebranded.
The eradication of the contraceptives is part of the Trump administration’s
months-
long demolition of the Agency for International Development (
USAID), the largest funding agency for humanitarian and development aid in the world. After the unofficial “department of government efficiency” (Doge)
erased 83% of USAID’s programs, Rubio
announced in June that USAID’s entire international workforce would be abolished and its foreign assistance programs would be moved to the state department. The agency will be
replaced by an organization called America First.
In total, the funding cuts to USAID could lead to more than 14m additional deaths by 2030, according to a recent
study published in the journal the Lancet. A third of those deaths could be children.
“If you have an unintended pregnancy and you end up having to seek unsafe abortion, it’s quite likely that you will die,” said Sarah Shaw, the associate director of advocacy at MSI Reproductive Choices, a global family planning organization that works in nearly 40 countries. “If you’re not given the means to space or limit your births, you’re putting your life at risk or your child’s life at risk.”