[7] On 12 September 1922, Pomgol was ordered to be abolished and replaced by Posledgol by a decree of the All-Russian Central Executive Committee.
On the same day, Pomgol committees were dissolved and the resolution expressed gratitude to the ARA for donating eighty million gold rubles and for its contribution.
Posledgol would engage in food relief only for homeless children and a small number of ill or disabled adults.
[5] A special Posledgol 1% tax was levied on population, excluding single housewives households and those without livestock, for famine relief.
Posledgol and Nansen Mission organized the sale of Russian handicrafts abroad for “the reconstruction of the peasant craft industry”.
On 31 October, orders went out to all branches from Olga Kameneva that Posledgol must impose regulations on foreign open kitchens, "which must result in closing most of them.
Posledgol send a message to its representative in Czechoslovakia, it was emphasized that this decision is “final” and “all new petitions of the Czechoslovak Institutions on this issue are useless”.
On 26 May, Karl Lander ordered to not allow ARA to send its medical supplies to hospitals or private individuals and instead hand over all containers and surplus food to Posledgol.
In total, Dagestan Central Committee of Posledgol allotted 122,285 rubles for road work during its lifetime.
[18] On 1 August 1923, Posledgol was liquidated and was succeeded by Committee on Foreign Aid (Komitet zagranichnoi pomoshchi, or KZP) led by Olga Kameneva.