The United States suspended all assistance programs for the Somali federal government Wednesday after reports surfaced alleging Somali officials had destroyed a U.S.-funded World Food Programme warehouse and seized 76 metric tons of food aid intended for its poverty-stricken citizens.
The food program's representatives did not return a request for comment about the theft.
The State Department plans to pause any future aid to the Somali government until officials address the theft concerns.
“Any resumption of assistance will be dependent upon the Somali Federal Government taking accountability for its unacceptable actions and taking appropriate remedial steps,” the U.S. Office of Foreign Assistance said.
Of that, about $105 million was allocated to emergency cash-based food assistance. Another $210 million was earmarked to fund a United Nations support office in Somalia.

According to Abib, he has tried to report the alleged abuse to the U.S. Embassy in Mogadishu and other U.S. officials since 2022, including information about systemic fraud, embezzlement, and mismanagement of the food program in Somalia, but was ignored.
The Somali federal government’s U.S. embassy did not return a request for comment Wednesday.
The foreign aid pause is the Trump administration’s latest action in a whole-of-government approach to unraveling what officials claim is systemwide federal funding fraud connected to the Somali immigrant community in Minnesota and other states.
