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Abu Dhabi event to celebrate UN’s partnershi­p with the UAE

▶ More than 300 staff at dozens of agencies operate in the Emirates, but vital work often goes unnoticed

- JOHN DENNEHY

The United Nations will hold a major event in Abu Dhabi today to raise awareness about its crucial work in the UAE.

Teams from the UN and the UAE government will mark the Year of Tolerance with a walk at Umm Al Emarat Park at 9.30am, while visitors can learn about the extent of the UN’s role in the country.

The event also marks UN Day – when it’s charter was announced 74 years ago.

The UN has a long history in the Emirates with Unicef, the children’s fund, active here since 1972. Almost 50 years on, at least 31 UN agencies with more than 300 staff work in the UAE, tackling everything from climate change to the global refugee crisis. But the huge scope of this work often goes unnoticed and today’s event seeks to rectify that.

Dena Assaf, the UN’s most senior official here, is leading the new approach.

“People have said to me: ‘I didn’t even know the UN worked here’,” Ms Assaf said. “We felt that needed to change.”

A UN veteran of 20 years’ service, Ms Assaf serves as a type of ambassador for the organisati­on. About a year into her fiveyear tenure as the UN’s resident co-ordinator, she wants to raise awareness about the UN, the UAE’s backing for her work and the country’s promotion of the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals – a set of 17 global targets agreed by 200 countries in 2015 to eliminate poverty and boost education by 2030.

The UN’s work here covers many areas but some stand out. The crown jewel is Internatio­nal Humanitari­an City in Dubai. Founded in 2003 by Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid, Vice President and Ruler of Dubai, it is the largest humanitari­an distributi­on centre in the world. Its members include nine UN agencies and scores of businesses. Teams dispatch aid to places such as Syria, Afghanista­n and Yemen from its huge network of warehouses at Dubai Industrial City.

“The World Food Programme uses Dubai as a global distributi­on hub,” Ms Assaf said. “It chose the UAE ... because of the location and the facility. Even their car fleets are managed from Dubai. What is different here is that the UAE supports other countries [directly] but also provides a platform to support other countries.”

Other areas of co-operation include female empowermen­t. The first group of Arab female peacekeepe­rs graduated in May from a UAE-funded training programme.

The initiative is run by UN Women with the Ministry of Defence and the General Women’s Union, and involved more than 130 women from the UAE, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Egypt,

Bahrain, Yemen and Sudan. The three-month programme trained the women in peacekeepi­ng, first aid and field engineerin­g. Although most of the women are not soldiers or even peacekeepe­rs, yet, the skills they gain make them eligible for service in their home countries and eventual UN duty.

The UAE is home to an office of the UN’s Convention on Migratory Species. First signed in 1979 and now agreed to by more than 150 countries including the UAE, it seeks to protect migratory species passing through the region, such as saker falcons and other raptors. “They are being hosted here with financial support to do the work,” Ms Assaf said.

This support is all the more crucial because the UN is facing financial difficulti­es. Only 129 of the organisati­on’s 193 member states have paid into next year’s budget, compared with 141 last year. The shortfall currently stands at $1.3 billion (Dh4.77bn), compared with about $1bn a year ago.

Other areas of co-operation extend to Expo 2020 – where the UN will have its own pavilion – and joint efforts to tackle climate change. The UAE hosted the Abu Dhabi Climate Meeting in June where UN-Secretary General, Antonio Guterres, issued a warning that the world faced a fight for its life. But this is just some of the work being done and that is where today’s event comes in.

“These are usually held in hotels but I wanted to do it outside and let the public know that the UN is here,” Ms Assaf said. “The values of the Year of Tolerance match with the UN. It is a good partnershi­p.”

The UAE supports other countries directly but also provides a platform to support other countries DENA ASSAF UN resident co-ordinator

 ?? Jaime Puebla / The National ?? Internatio­nal Humanitari­an City in Dubai is the world’s largest aid logistics centre
Jaime Puebla / The National Internatio­nal Humanitari­an City in Dubai is the world’s largest aid logistics centre

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