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American Focus > Blog > World News > Radio Free Asia lays off most of its staff after major funding cuts : NPR
World News

Radio Free Asia lays off most of its staff after major funding cuts : NPR

Last updated: May 2, 2025 3:50 pm
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Radio Free Asia lays off most of its staff after major funding cuts : NPR
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The receptionist desk sits empty at Radio Free Asia, Tuesday, April 1, 2025, in Washington, D.C.

Rod Lamkey/AP/FR172078


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Rod Lamkey/AP/FR172078

Radio Free Asia is laying off about 90 percent of its staff and is shutting down many of its language services, citing its inability to continue paying employees after the Trump administration cut off its funding.

“We are in an unconscionable situation,” Bay Fang, RFA’s president and CEO, said in a statement. “Because we can no longer rely on [the U.S. Agency for Global Media] to disburse our funds as Congress intended, we will have to begin mass layoffs and let entire language services go dark in the next week.”

This past March, President Trump ordered the U.S. Agency for Global Media (USAGM), the federal agency which distributes funds to RFA and other U.S. government-funded broadcasters, to wind down their operations to the bare minimum, in an effort “to reduce unnecessary governmental entities.”

Since 1996, RFA has broadcast in languages like Burmese, Cambodian and Mandarin to a weekly audience of around 60 million listeners.

It and the other U.S. government-funded broadcasters were set up in the wake of World War II, to reach listeners and readers living in what the U.S. considers repressive or authoritarian societies and to promote democratic values.

Combined, these broadcasters reached a weekly audience of more than 400 million people outside the U.S. around the world. In the last decade, RFA has broken stories on China’s detention campaign on ethnic Uyghurs and continued on-the-ground reporting in Myanmar in the midst of a civil war. Now only one staff member of the broadcaster’s Uyghur-language service remains, Mamatjan Juma, the former deputy director of the Uyghur language service, said in an interview with NPR.

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“This work is more than a job for me and so many of the people who are part of RFA. They are immensely proud to be part of this team and see it as their life’s work to shine a light into the dark corners of the countries we cover,” Fang told NPR on Friday. ” So today was perhaps the most difficult in my career.”

After Trump’s directive in March, Kari Lake, a Trump senior advisor who effectively runs USAGM, promptly terminated congressionally-appropriated grants to Radio Free Asia and the other nonprofit news outlets funded by the U.S. government, including Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and Middle East Broadcasting Networks (MBN). She also shut down Voice of America, which is part of the government.

Lake, a former television anchor who lost an Arizona senate race last year, has called the agency she now effectively heads “unsalvageable.” “The rot is so bad. It’s like having a rotten fish and trying to find a little portion you can eat,” she said of USAGM in an interview with Newsmax in March.

VOA and the Office for Cuba Broadcasting, which runs Spanish-language programs, were forced to suspend more than 1,000 of their employees. RFA put about three fourths of its staff on unpaid leave.

In April, a federal judge in Washington D.C. ordered the administration to reinstate RFA and MBN’s funds and employees, saying the White House’s order to dismantle the broadcasters was “arbitrary and capricious.”

But this week, a D.C.

The administrative stay granted by the appeals court has temporarily frozen the court order for RFA and MBN. Following this development, RFA took action the next day by officially laying off a significant number of staff members who were already on unpaid leave. Despite the layoffs, RFA’s Fang mentioned that a skeleton crew is still in place to update the much-reduced programming.

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