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U.S. Embassy in London Puts Surplus Goods Up for Auction

LONDON — Are you in the market for 1,200 rolls of toilet paper? A broken Dyson vacuum cleaner? A Sony camera in unknown working condition — which does not come with a charger?

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U.S. Embassy in London Puts Surplus Goods Up for Auction
By
Iliana Magra
, New York Times

LONDON — Are you in the market for 1,200 rolls of toilet paper? A broken Dyson vacuum cleaner? A Sony camera in unknown working condition — which does not come with a charger?

If so, you are in luck. The U.S. Embassy in London is holding an online auction in which you can also find a used Volvo S80, a photocopier, a printer table and 22 plastic chairs, among other items.

This is far from the first auction to be held in the embassy in London, but it might be the only one to have garnered so much attention online.

In January, the embassy moved from a building listed as having high architectural interest, in the upmarket Grosvenor Square in central London, to a fortified, high-tech glass construction on a redevelopment site near the River Thames.

The move attracted the ire of President Donald Trump, who railed at the cost of the new building as a “bad deal” and canceled a visit to London to open it.

There are four other active online auctions of surplus properties from U.S. embassies.

“All of our embassies around the world regularly hold auctions in order to dispose of surplus property,” an embassy spokeswoman said by phone Wednesday.

None of the items bear the U.S. insignia or are of historical value, the spokeswoman added.

But you can bid on a stained rug, used mattress or an X-ray machine from the U.S. Embassy in Yereman, Armenia; and an air-conditioning unit from the one in Tirana, Albania.

Get a light-green living room set on which diplomatic visitors to the embassy in Kiev, Ukraine, may have made themselves comfortable. Snap up two tangerine arm chairs sold in Ankara, Turkey.

Whether it is in euros, pounds, or Turkish lira, the revenue from the online auctions goes back to the budget of the U.S. government.

“If foreign excess personal property is not disposed of by transfer or return to the United States, it may be sold if in the best interest of the U.S. government,” according to the country’s Foreign Affairs Manual.

The toilet roll set, for example, had attracted 32 bidders by Wednesday afternoon and was going for almost $335.

The embassy spokeswoman said that embassy move had created a need for smaller toilet rolls.

“The new embassy has a different toilet roll dispenser,” she explained, adding that this auction was an opportunity to discard the toilet rolls from the old embassy building.

So hurry — the online auction will be running until Aug. 8.

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