Kuwait Times

Strapped UN health agency spends big on travel

We don’t trust people to do the right thing when it comes to travel

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The World Health Organizati­on routinely spends about $200 million a year on travel - far more than what it doles out to fight some of the biggest problems in public health including AIDS, tuberculos­is or malaria, according to internal documents obtained by The Associated Press. As the cash-strapped UN health agency has pleaded for more money to fund its responses to health crises worldwide, it has also been struggling to get its own travel costs under control. Despite introducin­g new rules to try to curb its expansive travel budget, senior officials have complained internally that UN staffers are breaking the rules by booking perks like business class airplane tickets and rooms in five-star hotels.

The $201 million yearly average that WHO spends on travel far outstrips what it reserves for some of its top programs, although those budgets sometimes include certain travel costs. Last year, WHO spent about $71 million on AIDS and hepatitis. On malaria, it spent $61 million. And to slow tuberculos­is, WHO invested $59 million. Still, some health programs do get exceptiona­l funding - the agency spends about $450 million trying to wipe out polio every year.

On a recent trip to Guinea where WHO director-general Dr Margaret Chan praised health workers in West Africa for triumphing over Ebola, she stayed in the biggest presidenti­al suite at the Palm Camayenne hotel in Conakry. The suite has an advertised price of 900 euros ($1,008) a night. The agency declined to say who picked up the tab, noting only that her hotels are sometimes paid for by the host country. But some say that sends the wrong message to the rest of the agency’s 7,000 staffers. “We don’t trust people to do the right thing when it comes to travel,” said Nick Jeffreys, WHO’s director of finance, during an in-house seminar on accountabi­lity in September 2015 - a video of which was obtained by the AP.

Despite WHO’s numerous travel regulation­s, Jeffreys said staffers “can sometimes manipulate a little bit their travel.” He said the agency couldn’t be sure they were always booking the cheapest ticket or that the travel was even warranted. “People don’t always know what the right thing to do is,” he said. Ian Smith, executive director of Chan’s office, said the chair of WHO’s audit committee said the agency often did little to stop misbehavio­r. “We, as an organizati­on, sometimes function as if rules are there to be broken and that exceptions are the rule rather than the norm,” Smith said.

Earlier that year, a memorandum was sent to Chan and other top leaders with the subject, “ACTIONS TO CONTAIN TRAVEL COSTS” in allcaps. The memo reported that compliance with rules that travel be booked in advance was “very low” and also pointed out that WHO was under pressure from its member countries to save money. Travel would always be necessary, the memo said, but “as an organizati­on we must demonstrat­e that we are serious about managing this appropriat­ely.”

In a statement to the AP, the UN health agency said “the nature of WHO’s work often requires WHO staff to travel” and said costs had been reduced 14 percent last year compared to the previous year - although that year’s total was exceptiona­lly high due to the 2014 Ebola outbreak in West Africa. But staffers are still openly ignoring the rules. An internal analysis in March, obtained by the AP, found that only two of seven department­s at WHO’s Geneva headquarte­rs met their targets, and concluded the compliance rate for booking travel in advance was between 28 and 59 percent.

Since 2013, WHO has paid out $803 million for travel. WHO’s approximat­ely $2 billion annual budget is drawn from the taxpayer-funded contributi­ons of its 194 member countries, with the United States the largest contributo­r. After he was elected, US President Donald Trump tweeted: “The UN has such great potential,” but had become “just a club for people to get together, talk, and have a good time. So sad!” Some health experts said while WHO’s travel costs look out of place when compared to some of its disease budgets, that doesn’t necessaril­y mean that travel expenses are inflated.

Disease programs

Michael Osterholm, an infectious diseases expert at the University of Minnesota, has frequently been flown to WHO meetings - in economy - on the agency’s dime. “This may just speak to how misplaced internatio­nal priorities are, that WHO is getting so little for these disease programs,” he said. During the Ebola disaster in West Africa, WHO’s travel costs spiked to $234 million. Although experts say on-the-ground help was critical, some question whether the agency couldn’t have shaved costs so that more funds went to West Africa, where the three stricken countries couldn’t even afford basics like protective boots, gloves and soap for endangered medical workers or body bags for the thousands who died.

Dr Bruce Aylward, who directed WHO’s outbreak response, racked up nearly $400,000 in travel expenses during the Ebola crisis, sometimes flying by helicopter to visit clinics instead of traveling by jeep over muddy roads, according to internal trip reports he filed. Chan spent more than $370,000 in travel that year, as documented in a confidenti­al 25-page analysis of WHO expenses that identified the agency’s top 50 spenders. Three sources who asked not to be identified for fear of losing their jobs told the AP that Chan often flew in first class.

Until February, WHO said the travel policy “included the possibilit­y for the (director-general) to fly first class,” but that Chan flew business class and requested the policy be changed. “There’s a huge inequality between the people at the top who are getting helicopter­s and business class and everyone else who just has to make do,” said Sophie Harman, an expert in global health politics at Queen Mary University in London. Other internatio­nal aid agencies, including Doctors Without Borders, explicitly forbid their staff from traveling in business class even having the charity’s president fly in economy class, a spokeswoma­n said. With a staff of about 37,000 aid workers versus WHO’s 7,000 staffers, Doctors Without Borders spends about $43 million on travel a year. — AP

 ??  ?? MONROVIA, Liberia: In this file photo a medical worker sprays people being discharged from the Island Clinic Ebola treatment center in Monrovia, Liberia. — AP photos
MONROVIA, Liberia: In this file photo a medical worker sprays people being discharged from the Island Clinic Ebola treatment center in Monrovia, Liberia. — AP photos
 ??  ?? GENEVA, Switzerlan­d: In this file photo, Margaret Chan, left, General Director of the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) and Bruce Aylward, right, Executive Director of WHO and Health Emergencie­s Director-General’s Special Representa­tive for the Ebola...
GENEVA, Switzerlan­d: In this file photo, Margaret Chan, left, General Director of the World Health Organizati­on (WHO) and Bruce Aylward, right, Executive Director of WHO and Health Emergencie­s Director-General’s Special Representa­tive for the Ebola...

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