United Nations Office at Nairobi

The United Nations Office at Nairobi (UNON) is one of four major United Nations office sites[lower-alpha 1] where numerous different UN agencies have a joint presence. Established in 1996, it is the UN's headquarters in Africa.[1]

United Nations Office at Nairobi
UNON
Location within Kenya
Alternative namesUNON
General information
Town or cityNairobi
CountryKenya
Coordinates1.2346°S 36.8164°E / -1.2346; 36.8164
Website
www.unon.org

The United Nations Office at Nairobi also hosts the global headquarters for two programmes: the United Nations Environmental Programme (UNEP)[2] and the United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-Habitat).[3]

In November 2004, the United Nations Security Council held a rare session at Nairobi to discuss the armed conflicts in southern and western Sudan that constituted a phase of the Second Sudanese Civil War.[4] The meeting was convened at the urging of then-Ambassador John Danforth of the United States.[5]

Site

Flags of member states at the United Nations, Nairobi

The complex of buildings is located next to the Karura Forest in the Gigiri district of Nairobi, along United Nations Avenue. It stands across the street from the US Embassy in Kenya.

The UN complex contains a 'green' building, a completely energy and carbon-neutral building, housing UNEP and UN-Habitat offices.[6][7] The building is the first of its kind in Africa, recycling water and using natural light to reduce reliance on artificial lighting. In addition, the building is designed to use natural flow of air as a substitute to air conditioning, and it contains solar panels to generate all the energy that the building might consume.[8] It was opened on 31 March 2011 by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki.[9]

The zero-energy UN-Habitat and UNEP office building

Burned Trees, a series of sculptures designed by Monegasque artist Philippe Pastor aimed at drawing attention to forest conflagrations, has been exhibited continuously at the office since 2006.[10]

Visits

The office complex can also be visited by the public, in the form of pre-booked, guided tours, provided by the UN Visitors' Service of Nairobi. Anyone interested has the opportunity to book a tour, during which one can learn about the history and work of the UN, while also getting an opportunity to see the offices, including the above mentioned green building. Tours are available during office hours each day, in various languages (e.g. English, Chinese, German, French, Kiswahili).

Constituent agencies

Headquartered at Nairobi:

Presence at Nairobi:

UNON also hosts the annual East Africa Model United Nations Conference for secondary school and University students from East Africa.[11]

Directors-General

UNON is headed by a Director-General, who is at the rank of Under-Secretary-General in the United Nations System. The Director-General is appointed by the Secretary General.[12] The current Director-General is Maimunah Mohd Sharif who holds the position in an acting capacity. She is also the Executive Director of UN-Habitat [13]

[14]

  1. Klaus Töpfer, Germany, 1998–2006
  2. Anna Tibaijuka, Tanzania, 2006–2009
  3. Achim Steiner, Brazil, 2010–2011
  4. Sahle-Work Zewde, Ethiopia, 2011–2018
  5. Hanna Tetteh, Ghana, 2018–2019
  6. Maimunah Mohd Sharif,[15] Malaysia, 2019–2020 (Acting)
  7. Zainab Bangura,[16] Sierra Leone, 2020 - Present
gollark: Again, black box testing.
gollark: We still have neuroscience and psychology, though.
gollark: Not as well, obviously.
gollark: You can study it as a black box by measuring inputs and outputs.
gollark: Even if, somehow (not that I believe this) our mind is computed on "souls" or something instead of the matter in our brains, you can still study it.

See also

Notes

  1. New York City, Geneva, Nairobi and Vienna

References

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