Judge in the US gave yesterday, Friday, ordered to return to their work temporarily to about 2,700 US employees for international development (USAID), who would be licensed by the President’s government today Donald Trumpstopping some aspects of the plan to dismantle the service.

Judge Carl Nichols in Washington, who had been appointed by Trump during his first term in the presidency, was in part in a part -time request by the largest trade union workers in the US government and union of workers abroad, who had appealed to stop her efforts Government to close the service.

Nichols’ mandate, which will be valid until February 14, is blocking the implementation by the Trump government of the plans to put on about 2,200 USAID employees today and reinstates about 500 employees who had already been put into work.

It also prohibits the government to relocate USAID employees who are on humanitarian missions abroad.

Nichols will consider a request for a longer -term suspension of the implementation of this plan to a hearing scheduled to take place on Wednesday. In his mandate, he states that the unions “strongly displayed the irreparable damage” that would cause if the court did not interfere with.

Nichols rejected other demands from the unions to reopen the USAID buildings and restore funding for service grants and contracts.

The government in a memorandum sent to the employees of this Service on Thursday noted that it would maintain 611 key US foreign assistance workers from a global workforce that measures more than 10,000 workers in total.

“The large reduction in the workforce, as well as the closure of offices, the coercive relocation of these persons have all been made in the end of the executive, in violation of the separation of powers,” said trade union lawyer Carla Gilbraid in a hearing Yesterday, Friday.

Justice ministry official Brett Sumeit noted before Nichols that about 2,200 USAID employees would be on leave on the basis of government plans, adding that 500 have already been set.

“The president has decided that there is corruption and fraud in the USAID,” Suet said.

Trump accused a post yesterday, on Friday, on the USAID Truth Social platform -without documenting it -for corruption and fraudulent money expenditure.

Corruption in USAID “is at unprecedented levels. Close her! “He wrote.

A few hours after his swearing -in on January 20, Trump ordered all American external assistance to be stopped to ensure that he is aligned with his “first America” ​​policy. Since then there has been chaos in USAID, which distributes humanitarian aid of billions of dollars around the world.