State Department lays off over 1,300 employees under Trump administration plan

State Department lays off over 1,300 employees under Trump administration plan
Secretary of State Marco Rubio. (Reuters)
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Updated 12 July 2025
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State Department lays off over 1,300 employees under Trump administration plan

State Department lays off over 1,300 employees under Trump administration plan
  • The cuts have been roundly criticized by current and former diplomats

WASHINGTON: The US State Department fired more than 1,300 employees on Friday in line with a dramatic reorganization plan from the Trump administration that critics say will damage America’s global leadership and efforts to counter threats abroad.

The department sent layoff notices to 1,107 civil servants and 246 foreign service officers with assignments in the United States, according to a senior department official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss personnel matters.

Notices said positions were being “abolished” and the employees would lose access to State Department headquarters in Washington and their email and shared drives by 5 p.m., according to a copy obtained by The Associated Press.

As fired employees packed their belongings, dozens of former colleagues, ambassadors, members of Congress and others spent a warm, humid day protesting outside. Holding signs saying, “Thank you to America’s diplomats” and “We all deserve better,” they mourned the institutional loss from the cuts and highlighted the personal sacrifice of serving in the foreign service.

“We talk about people in uniform serving. But foreign service officers take an oath of office, just like military officers,” said Anne Bodine, who retired from the State Department in 2011 after serving in Iraq and Afghanistan. “This is not the way to treat people who served their country and who believe in ‘America First.’”

While lauded by President Donald Trump, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and their Republican allies as overdue and necessary to make the department leaner and more efficient, the cuts have been roundly criticized by current and former diplomats who say they will weaken US influence and the ability to counter existing and emerging threats abroad.

The layoffs are part of big changes to State Department work

The Trump administration has pushed to reshape American diplomacy and worked aggressively to shrink the size of the federal government, including mass dismissals driven by the Department of Government Efficiency and moves to dismantle whole departments like the US Agency for International Development and the Education Department.

USAID, the six-decade-old foreign assistance agency, was absorbed into the State Department last week after the administration dramatically slashed foreign aid funding.

A recent ruling by the Supreme Court cleared the way for the layoffs to start, while lawsuits challenging the legality of the cuts continue to play out. The department had advised staffers Thursday that it would be sending layoff notices to some of them soon.

In a May letter notifying Congress about the reorganization, the department said it had just over 18,700 US-based employees and was looking to reduce the workforce by 18 percent through layoffs and voluntary departures, including deferred resignation programs.

“It’s not a consequence of trying to get rid of people. But if you close the bureau, you don’t need those positions,” Rubio told reporters Thursday during a visit to Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. “Understand that some of these are positions that are being eliminated, not people.”

Foreign service officers affected will be placed immediately on administrative leave for 120 days, after which they will formally lose their jobs, according to an internal notice obtained by AP. For most civil servants, the separation period is 60 days, it said.

Protesters gather to criticize the job cuts

Inside and just outside the State Department, employees spent over an hour applauding their departing colleagues, who got more support — and sometimes hugs — from protesters and others gathered across the street.

As speakers took to a bullhorn, people behind them held signs in the shape of gravestones that said “democracy,” “human rights” and “diplomacy.”

“It’s just heartbreaking to stand outside these doors right now and see people coming out in tears, because all they wanted to do was serve this country,” said Sen. Andy Kim, a New Jersey Democrat who worked as a civilian adviser for the State Department in Afghanistan during the Obama administration.

Robert Blake, who served as a US ambassador under the George W. Bush and Obama administrations, said he came to support his peers at a very “unjust time.”

“I have a lot of friends who served very loyally and with distinction and who are being fired for nothing to do with their performance,” Blake said.

Gordon Duguid, a 31-year veteran of the foreign service, said of the Trump administration: “They’re not looking for people who have the expertise ... they just want people who say, ‘OK, how high’” to jump.

“That’s a recipe for disaster,” he added.

The American Foreign Service Association, the union that represents US diplomats, said it opposed the job cuts during “a moment of great global instability.”

“Losing more diplomatic expertise at this critical global moment is a catastrophic blow to our national interests,” the AFSA said in a statement. “These layoffs are untethered from merit or mission.”

As the layoffs began, paper signs started going up around the State Department. “Colleagues, if you remain: resist fascism,” said one.

An employee who was among those laid off said she printed them about a week ago, when the Supreme Court cleared way for the reductions. The employee spoke to the AP on the condition of anonymity out of fear of retaliation.

She worked with about a dozen colleagues to put up the signs. They focused on bathrooms, where there are no security cameras, although others went in more public spaces.

“Nobody wants to feel like these guys can just get away with this,” she said.

The State Department is undergoing a big reorganization

The State Department is planning to eliminate some divisions tasked with oversight of America’s two-decade involvement in Afghanistan, including an office focused on resettling Afghan nationals who worked alongside the US military.

Jessica Bradley Rushing, who worked at the Office of the Coordinator for Afghan Relocation Efforts, known as CARE, said she was shocked when she received another dismissal notice Friday after she had already been put on administrative leave in March.

“I spent the entire morning getting updates from my former colleagues at CARE, who were watching this carnage take place within the office,” she said, adding that every person on her team received a notice. “I never even anticipated that I could be at risk for that because I’m already on administrative leave.”

The State Department said the reorganization will affect more than 300 bureaus and offices, as it eliminates divisions it describes as doing unclear or overlapping work. It says Rubio believes “effective modern diplomacy requires streamlining this bloated bureaucracy.”

The letter to Congress was clear that the reorganization is also intended to eliminate programs — particularly those related to refugees and immigration, as well as human rights and democracy promotion — that the Trump administration believes have become ideologically driven in a way that is incompatible with its priorities and policies.

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Lee reported from Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, and Amiri from New York. Chris Megerian in Washington contributed.

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Follow the AP’s coverage of the US Department of State at https://apnews.com/hub/us-department-of-state.


Polish court says Ukrainian wanted in Nord Stream case must remain in custody

Updated 3 sec ago
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Polish court says Ukrainian wanted in Nord Stream case must remain in custody

Polish court says Ukrainian wanted in Nord Stream case must remain in custody
The explosions marked an escalation in the Ukraine conflict and squeezed energy supplies on the continent
Volodymyr Z. was detained near Warsaw on Tuesday. He will now be kept in custody for seven days

WARSAW: A Polish court decided on Wednesday that the Ukrainian diver wanted by Berlin over his alleged involvement in explosions which damaged the Nord Stream gas pipeline, must be kept in custody while a decision is made on whether to transfer him to Germany.
Described by both Moscow and the West as an act of sabotage, the explosions marked an escalation in the Ukraine conflict and squeezed energy supplies on the continent. No one has taken responsibility for the blasts and Ukraine has denied any role.
Volodymyr Z. was detained near Warsaw on Tuesday. He will now be kept in custody for seven days.
Germany’s top prosecutors’ office said Polish police had acted upon a European arrest warrant that it had issued.
Its statement said the diver was one of a group of people who were suspected of renting a sailing yacht in the German Baltic Sea port of Rostock and planting explosives on the pipelines, which run from Russia to Germany, near the Danish island of Bornholm in September 2022.
He faces accusations of conspiring to commit an explosives attack and of “anti-constitutional sabotage,” the German prosecutors added.
In August, Italian police arrested a Ukrainian man suspected of coordinating the attacks. That man, identified only as Serhii K., plans to take his fight against extradition to Italy’s highest court after a lower court ordered his transfer to Germany, his legal team said.

22 killed in church scaffolding collapse in Ethiopia: state media

22 killed in church scaffolding collapse in Ethiopia: state media
Updated 30 min 48 sec ago
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22 killed in church scaffolding collapse in Ethiopia: state media

22 killed in church scaffolding collapse in Ethiopia: state media
  • The incident occurred at around 7:45 am in the town of Arerti
  • “Many pilgrims were killed or sustained physical injuries,” local official Atnafu Abate told EBC

ADDID ABABA: Makeshift scaffolding set up at a church in Ethiopia collapsed Wednesday, killing at least 22 people and injuring 55, state media said.

The incident occurred at around 7:45 am in the town of Arerti, roughly 70 kilometers (43 miles) east of capital Addis Ababa, when a group was visiting for an annual Virgin Mary festival.

“Many pilgrims were killed or sustained physical injuries,” local official Atnafu Abate told the Ethiopian Broadcasting Corporation (EBC), putting the toll at 22 dead and 55 wounded.

Some remained under the rubble, he said, without giving any further details about those trapped or possible rescue efforts.

Some of the more seriously hurt were taken to hospitals in the capital, he added.

Images shared on the ECB’s official Facebook page showed a mess of collapsed wooden poles, with crowds gathering amid the dense debris.

Other pictures appeared to show the outside of the church, where scaffolding had been precariously constructed.

Health and safety regulations are virtually non-existent in Ethiopia, Africa’s second most populous nation, and construction accidents are common.

The sprawling country is a mosaic of 80 ethnic groups and among the oldest Christian nations globally.

Its predecessor, the Axumite Empire, declared Christianity the state religion in the fourth century.


Kyrgyz leader seeks death penalty for worst crimes against children and women

Updated 51 min 53 sec ago
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Kyrgyz leader seeks death penalty for worst crimes against children and women

Kyrgyz leader seeks death penalty for worst crimes against children and women
  • His move followed the killing of a 17-year-old girl, which sparked public outrage
  • Her body was found on September 27, and a suspect has been detained

BISHKEK: Kyrgyzstan’s populist President Sadyr Japarov has ordered the drafting of a bill to reinstate the death penalty for the most serious crimes against children and women.

His move followed the killing of a 17-year-old girl, which sparked public outrage in the mountainous former Soviet republic of around seven million people.

Her body was found on September 27, and a suspect has been detained.

Kyrgyzstan was ranked the most dangerous country for women in Central Asia in the previous two years, according to the global Women, Peace and Security Index.

According to the presidential administration, the proposed legislation would reinstate the death penalty for rape of children and for rape followed by murder of women. Kyrgyzstan has observed a moratorium on the death penalty since 2007, meaning its return would require major constitutional and legal changes.

In a post on Facebook, Japarov’s press secretary said that the president was backing the bill in response to the murder of the girl, who has been named only as Aisuluu.

He said that Japarov believed that “crimes against women and children must not go unpunished.”

ELECTION DUE

The country holds a parliamentary election on November 30, with parties loyal to Japarov aiming to stay dominant.

Since coming to power on a wave of protests in 2020, Japarov has tightened his grip on Kyrgyzstan, traditionally Central Asia’s most democratic country, where three presidents have been ousted by mass demonstrations since independence in 1991.

According to Kyrgyz independent media outlet Kloop, 20–30 gender-targeted femicides are recorded annually, with overall 1,109 women killed between 2010 and 2023.

According to rights group Amnesty International, 113 nations had abolished the death penalty by the end of 2024 with 1,518 executions recorded worldwide that year, mostly in China, Iran, and other countries.


Poland to extend German border checks until April

Poland to extend German border checks until April
Updated 01 October 2025
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Poland to extend German border checks until April

Poland to extend German border checks until April
  • Border checks had been reinstated in July
  • Warsaw had accused Berlin of sending migrants back toward Poland

WARSAW: Poland on Wednesday said it would extend temporary checks along its borders with Germany and Lithuania by a further six months, until April 4 next year.

Border checks had been reinstated in July, with the Polish government justifying the measure as a way to combat irregular migration.

Warsaw had accused Berlin, which reintroduced checks along their shared border in 2023, of sending migrants back toward Poland — an accusation Germany denies.

“We are extending border controls with Germany and Lithuania to monitor the migration route originating from the Baltic states, passing through Poland, and leading to Western Europe,” Polish Interior Minister Marcin Kierwinski stated in a statement.

“We are intercepting individuals attempting to illegally transport migrants to the West,” he said.

The minister also referenced “persistent migratory pressure” on the border with Belarus, a country Warsaw accuses of instrumentalising migration to destabilize the region.

“During the first eight months of 2025, nearly 25,000 illegal crossing attempts were recorded at the Polish-Belarusian border,” according to the statement.

Over the same period, Polish border guards detained 2,400 people attempting to cross the Polish-German border irregularly in both directions, including almost 550 who had already breached barriers along the border with Belarus.

Around 60 smugglers were apprehended at the Polish-Lithuanian border from January to August this year.

European countries in the Schengen free travel area may introduce border checks if they believe there is a threat to public order or domestic security.


Myanmar’s war torn Rakhine faces a hunger catastrophe, aid groups say 

Myanmar’s war torn Rakhine faces a hunger catastrophe, aid groups say 
Updated 01 October 2025
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Myanmar’s war torn Rakhine faces a hunger catastrophe, aid groups say 

Myanmar’s war torn Rakhine faces a hunger catastrophe, aid groups say 
  • More than 100,000 children in Rakhine are suffering from acute malnutrition, with less than 2 percent able to access treatment, according to previously unreported data provided by aid workers
  • Myanmar’s ruling junta has suppressed information about the crisis by pressuring researchers not to collect data about hunger and aid workers not to publish it

BANGLADESH: After Ajib Bahar’s six-month-old son fell sick last year in Myanmar’s war-torn Rakhine state, the 38-year-old Rohingya mother said she had no medicine or food to give him. The boy died in her arms.

“My children cried all night from hunger. I boiled grass and gave it to them just to keep them quiet,” Bahar said from a refugee camp in Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar, where she and her family sought safety after fleeing violence and starvation in Myanmar.

Rakhine state, a western coastal region that has suffered years of conflict and ethnic violence mostly targeting the Rohingya Muslim minority, is now facing an “alarming” hunger crisis due to a “deadly combination of conflict, blockades, and funding cuts,” according to the United Nations’ World Food Programme.

At a high-level UN conference in New York on Myanmar’s minority groups on Tuesday, the United States and Britain announced that they would provide $96 million in further assistance to support the Bangladesh refugee camps that house over a million Rohingya who fled Rakhine.

SURVIVING ON LEAVES

Myanmar has been in crisis since the military seized power in 2021 and brutally cracked down on protests, prompting a nationwide armed uprising and re-igniting a simmering conflict in Rakhine between the junta and a powerful armed group, the Arakan Army.

Five Rohingya, including Ajib Bahar and her husband, told Reuters they had survived on leaves, roots and grass in Rakhine before escaping to Bangladesh in the last six months.

More than 100,000 children in Rakhine are suffering from acute malnutrition, with less than 2 percent able to access treatment, according to previously unreported data provided by aid workers.

They declined to be identified for fear of retribution. Myanmar’s ruling junta has suppressed information about the crisis by pressuring researchers not to collect data about hunger and aid workers not to publish it, Reuters reported last year.

Security fears and restrictions by the junta and the Arakan Army mean the United Nations is unable to move food beyond Sittwe, the junta-controlled state capital, into the central and northern parts of Rakhine, said Michael Dunford, the acting UN head in Myanmar.

“This is obviously contributing to the spike in hunger that we are seeing,” said Dunford, who is also the country representative for WFP.

“We’re desperately frustrated because we know that there are populations that require our support.”

A spokesperson for the Arakan Army, Khine Thu Kha, said the junta was blocking the flow of aid, including food and medicine, and that the group was cooperating with the UN and aid agencies.

Their data suggested one in four children are malnourished but it had not reached famine levels, he said, blaming the military blockade. He said the conflict made it difficult to provide medical treatment but the Arakan Army was trying to keep the prices of necessities as low as possible and reduce taxes.

A Myanmar junta spokesman did not respond to a request for comment.

AID BLOCKED

A combination of conflict, near-empty markets, a stalled economy and blockades is squeezing Rakhine’s population like never before, aid workers say.

The situation is particularly dire in camps for tens of thousands of internally displaced people in the state, many of them Rohingya who fled their homes during previous waves of violence and face severe restrictions on their movement.

The data provided by aid workers showed acute malnutrition was widespread in the camps, with parents skipping meals to feed their children. It shows the number of people living in these conditions increased nearly tenfold between September 2023 to August this year.

Dunford said he spoke to residents at a Rohingya camp outside Sittwe earlier this year. The agency had supported them before funding cuts forced them to limit food supplies.

“I had one gentleman, in tears, tell me that, ‘If WFP can’t feed us and the authorities won’t support us, then please drop a bomb on us. Put us out of our misery,’” he said.

’SEVERE WASTING’

Rohingya are arriving in Bangladesh in much poorer health than previous waves of refugees, with high rates of malnutrition particularly among children under five and pregnant and lactating women, the International Rescue Committee, a nonprofit working in the refugee camps, said last month.

The increase in new arrivals coincided with a critical aid funding shortfall worldwide and overstretched health and nutrition services, the IRC said.

“There was hardly any food to eat. Most days we had only one meal,” said Mohammed Idris, Bahar’s husband, a farmer from Buthidaung township, adding that he gave his food to the children and ate their leftovers.

Food prices surged and sometimes there was nothing to buy, he said.

“I can’t remember the last time we ate an egg or meat.”

Bahar is now eight months pregnant. Although the family is grateful to be living in peace, conditions in the camp are difficult, she said.

“I wonder — will this child be born hungry too?“