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Last updated on February 12, 2012 at 6:37 EST

Trump to U.N. renovators: You should be fired

July 21, 2005

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Reality television star Donald Trump
told the U.S. Senate on Thursday the United Nations should be
fired over its handling of a $1.2 billion plan to renovate the
world body’s New York headquarters.

Trump, a New York real estate magnate who surrounds himself
with aspiring young executives on his NBC show “The Apprentice”
and then fires one a week, predicted the renovation would run
far over budget because U.N. managers were incompetent.

He insisted he could do the job for half the U.N. estimate,
but then admitted he had no plans to bid for the job.

“If you don’t know what you are doing it can be fraught
with cost overruns, et cetera, et cetera,” he told a Senate
Governmental Affairs Committee looking into the project, known
as the U.N. Capital Master Plan.

The U.S. Congress has agreed to loan the United Nations the
$1.2 billion at a 5.54 percent interest rate, to be repaid over
30 years. But some lawmakers have had second thoughts over
mismanagement of the $67 billion oil-for-food plan for Iraq.

However, Anne Patterson, the acting U.S. ambassador to the
United Nations, said Washington had been keeping a close eye on
the renovation project for the past several years to ensure it
was well planned and did not waste any U.S. taxpayer funds.

The United States pays 22 percent of the U.N. operating
budget, amounting to annual dues of about a quarter of a
billion dollars.

“We need to ensure that the project is carried out in a
cost-effective and transparent manner. I believe this has been
the case to date, and I assure you we will remain vigilant in
our oversight,” she said.

The 1952 landmark skyscraper on New York’s East River is
one of New York’s most popular tourist attractions but is
riddled with asbestos, lacks fire detectors or a sprinkler
system and has regular roof leaks.

The building is “egregiously in violation of any reasonable
level of safety and efficiency,” said Christopher Burnham, an
American and the new U.N. management chief. “It is unsafe for
employees of the U.N., the more than 1,200 Americans who work
there, members of the General Assembly, and potentially for the
city (of New York).”


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