Headquartered in Baltimore, Global Refuge, one of the country's oldest and largest organizations serving refugees and immigrants, was forced to lay off nearly 400 people nationwide after the Trump administration placed a freeze on foreign aid, its CEO and president said. The nonprofit has not received any federal money since December and was handed a stop work order on refugee resettlement, which has forced it to lay off more than half its workforce. The new administration also issued an executive order suspending the U.S. Refugee Admissions Program (USRAP), which stops the resettlement of tens of thousands of refugees seeking safety in the United States, according to Krish O'Mara Vignarajah, the President and CEO of Global Refuge. "We are struggling because, as a result of the president's executive order, and the stop work order, and on top of that, an unwillingness to pay their bills, organizations like Global Refuge, nonprofits across the country, are suffering," Vignarajah said. You can learn more about Global Refuge here .
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