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NewsMay 22, 2017

LONDON -- 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...

By MARIA CHENG ~ Associated Press

LONDON -- 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 U.N. health agency pleads for more money to fund its responses to health crises worldwide, it has 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 U.N. staffers are breaking the rules by booking perks such as business-class airplane tickets and rooms in five-star hotels.

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 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, Chan stayed in the biggest presidential suite at the Palm Camayenne hotel in Conakry.

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The suite has an advertised price of $1,008 a night.

The agency declined to say who picked up the tab, noting only her hotels sometimes are 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 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 the travel was 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.

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