US Ambassador to the United Nations Nikki Haley at the
Department of State in Washington.(Reuters File Photo)
The US State Department spent about $52,701 last year on
customised and mechanised curtains for the official residence of US Ambassador
to the UN Nikki Haley at a time when the department was undergoing deep budget
cuts and had frozen hiring, according to a media report.
The report in The New York Times said Haley is the first
US ambassador to live in the residence, located in a new building just blocks
away from the UN headquarters in New York.
A spokesman for Haley said plans to buy the curtains were
made in 2016, during the Obama administration and that Haley had no say in the
purchase.
The curtains themselves cost $29,900, while the motors
and hardware needed to open and close them automatically cost $22,801, the
report said, citing contracts. Installation took place from March to August
last year, during Haley’s tenure as ambassador.
Haley, 46, is the highest ranking Indian-American in the
Donald Trump administration.
The NYT report said that Haley’s curtains are more
expensive than the $31,000 dining room set purchased for the office of Ben
Carson, the secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
Following the controversial $31,000 purchase, President
Donald Trump had even considered firing Carson.
“While Haley’s curtains were being ordered and installed,
Rex W Tillerson, the administration’s first secretary of state, had frozen
hiring, pushed out many of the department’s most senior diplomats and proposed
cutting the department’s budget by 31%. In embassies around the world, projects
were eliminated, jobs were left unfilled and the delegation to last year’s
United Nations General Assembly meeting was slashed,” the report said.
The report quoted White House official in the Obama
administration Brett Bruen as saying that how could more than $50,000 be spent
on a customised curtain system for the ambassador to the UN when “you…tell
diplomats that basic needs cannot be met.”
Patrick Kennedy, the top management official at the State
Department during the Obama administration, however, defended the purchase,
saying that it would probably be used for years and that it was needed for both
security and entertaining purposes.
“All she’s got is a part-time maid, and the ability to
open and close the curtains quickly is important,” Kennedy said.
Haley’s predecessors had for decades lived in the Waldorf
Astoria hotel near the UN but after the hotel was purchased by a Chinese
insurance company, the State Department decided in 2016 to find a new residence
for its top diplomat due to security concerns.
The NYT report said the government leased the apartment
with an option to buy, according to Kennedy.
“The full-floor penthouse, with handsome hardwood floors
covering large open spaces stretching nearly 6,000 square feet, was listed at
$58,000 a month,” it said.
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