Today: 6 April 2025
12 February 2024
2 mins read

Indian-American Takes Key Role in USAID’s Global Disaster Response

According to the BHA, Sonali brings extensive experience in legislative affairs, national security policy, global health, and humanitarian aid…reports Asian Lite News

 Indian-American Sonali Korde took oath as assistant to the Administrator of USAID’s Bureau for Humanitarian Assistance (BHA) on Monday.

As the US government’s lead for international disaster response, the BHA monitors, mitigates, and responds to global hazards and humanitarian needs.

Sonali most recently served as Deputy to the US Special Envoy for Middle East Humanitarian Issues charged with leading the country’s diplomacy efforts to address the humanitarian crisis in Gaza.

“Leading the Bureau for Humanitarian Assistance is one of the toughest jobs at USAID. It’s a time of peak global conflict, climate-driven disasters, and displacement, and we all know the demand for aid is dramatically outpacing our ability to provide it,” USAID Administrator Samantha Power said in a statement.

“BHA needs a leader who can deftly navigate bureaucracy to mount efficient responses, who has the personal skills, the Congressional connections, and the budgeting experience, to be a powerful advocate for people in need… And someone who can cultivate, nurture, and empower teams to step up and meet the moment. That describes Sonali: uniquely Sonali, unique Sonali,” Power said.

Power said that Sonali’s Indian immigrant parents, who attended the swearing-in ceremony virtually, “endowed her with a deep appreciation for a world outside of their Cranford, New Jersey home”.

She praised Sonali’s “strong sense of justice and a desire to address inequity and unfairness” which, she said, comes from her parents.

“They took frequent trips back to India where Sonali saw a tale of two countries, such incredible dynamism and burgeoning intellect, culture, but also such extreme poverty which persists in many parts of the country — even with all of the success lifting so many hundreds of millions of people out of poverty — but seeing people with and people without,” Power said.

According to the BHA, Sonali brings extensive experience in legislative affairs, national security policy, global health, and humanitarian aid.

Before joining BHA, Sonali served as Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy in the Office of the Administrator at USAID, and prior to that as Acting Deputy Assistant Administrator at USAID’s Bureau for Legislative and Public Affairs.

In this role, she provided strategic and operational oversight of USAID’s engagement with the U.S. Congress, including negotiation of USAID legislative and budget issues with members of Congress, their committees, and staff.

Having worked for USAID in various roles since 2004, she has a background in legislative affairs, national security policy, infectious diseases and emergency humanitarian response, and global health, the BHA said.

From 2019-2020, Sonali served as Senior Policy Advisor on the Ebola response in Eastern Congo as well as Deputy Director for Coordination on the Covid-19 response.

Korde has an MA in International Relations from Yale University and a BS in Economics from New York University.

ALSO READ-Indian-Americans Urge Focus on Economy, Security in US Elections

Previous Story

Modi to Cement Diaspora Ties in UAE-Qatar Visits

Next Story

Gaza Faces Food Insecurity as Israeli Approval Delays Flour Transfer

Latest from -Top News

GAZA KILLINGS: War Crime?

Mobile Phone Footage Casts Doubt on Israeli Account of Ambulance Attack in Gaza Newly surfaced mobile phone footage has raised serious questions about the Israeli military’s justification for opening fire on a

Namibia voices concern over US tariffs

AGOA is a non-reciprocal trade arrangement aimed at supporting development in African countries through preferential access to US markets The Namibian government has expressed concern over newly imposed US tariffs, warning that

Uganda, South Sudanese leaders hold talks

Museveni, who is among the guarantors of a 2018 peace agreement that ended a five-year civil war, held closed-door discussions with President Salva Kiir Uganda’s President Yoweri Museveni was expected to meet

Namibia voices concern over US tariffs

AGOA is a non-reciprocal trade arrangement aimed at supporting development in African countries through preferential access to US markets The Namibian government has expressed concern over newly imposed US tariffs, warning that

US to revoke all South Sudan visas

Trump’s administration has taken aggressive measures to ramp up immigration enforcement, including the repatriation of people deemed to be in the US illegallyThe US said on Saturday it would revoke all visas
Go toTop