India

Little girl in a medical mask is holding a package.
Photo: © UNICEF

    The United Nations in India

    The United Nations system includes 26 organisations that have the privilege to serve in India. The Resident Coordinator, the designated representative of the UN Secretary-General to the Government leads the UN Country Team to advocate the mandate of the United Nations, while drawing on the support and guidance of the entire UN family.

    The United Nations provides strategic support to India to help the country achieve its aspirations to end poverty and inequality and to promote sustainable development in line with the globally agreed SDGs. The UN also supports India, as the world’s largest democracy, in the county’s ambitious commitments to rapid change and development priorities.

     

    Milestones

    1. India signs the United Nations Charter. India signs the United Nations Charter on 26 June along with 49 other countries in San Francisco, United States. The Charter sets out, among other things, the ‘Purposes of the United Nations’, which include, among other things, maintaining international peace and security, developing friendly relations among nations based on respect for the principle of equal rights and self-determination of peoples, and achieving international co-operation in solving international problems of an economic, social, cultural, or humanitarian character.
       
    2. ILO becomes the first independent specialized agency of the UN. The International Labour Organization (ILO), which had a presence in India since 1928, becomes the first independent specialised agency of the UN. ILO is the United Nations agency for the world of work. It sets international labour standards, promotes rights at work and encourages decent employment opportunities, the enhancement of social protection and the strengthening of dialogue on work-related issues.
       
    3. UNGA adopts the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The UN General Assembly adopts the Universal Declaration of Human Rights on 10 December 1948. The day is celebrated every year as Human Rights Day. India was one of 48 countries to vote in favour of the declaration. India’s Hansa Mehta was a member of the drafting committee – she was instrumental in having the original phrase “all men are created equal” changed to “all human being are created equal”. A staunch feminist, social worker, and Gandhian activist, she also drafted the Indian Women’s Charter of Rights and Duties, which demanded that women be treated equal to men.
       
    4. Jawaharlal Nehru delivers his first address as Prime Minister of India. “I should like to state to this General Assembly, on behalf of my people and my Government, that we adhere completely and absolutely to the principles and purpose of the United Nations Charter and that we shall try, to the best of our ability, to work for the realization of those principles and purposes.” Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru delivered his first address as Prime Minister of India to the UN General Assembly on 3 November 1948. 
       
    5. Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit be elected as first woman president of the UNGA. Vijaya Lakshmi Pandit became the first woman to be elected president of the UN General Assembly. Since then, only two women have held the position so far – Angie Elisabeth Brooks of Liberia in 1969 and Sheikha Haya Rashed Al-Khalifa of Bahrain in 2006.
       
    6. India’s first commitment to UN Peacekeeping. India deployed 60 Para to Korea under UN Command, and the unit would participate in India’s first ever peacekeeping mission following the 1953 armistice between the Koreas.
       
    7. Mahatma Gandhi’s birth anniversary declared as the International Day of Non-Violence. UN General Assembly declares 2 October, Mahatma Gandhi’s birth anniversary, as the International Day of Non-Violence. India initiated the General Assembly resolution of 15 June, 2007, which established the commemoration of the international day as an occasion to “disseminate the message of nonviolence… through education and public awareness.” The resolution also reaffirms “the universal relevance of the principles of nonviolence” and the desire “to secure a culture of peace, tolerance, understanding and nonviolence.”
       
    8. India declared a polio-free country. The number of polio cases in India fell from 559 in 2008 to 0 in 2012. The Government, in partnership with UNICEF, the World Health Organization (WHO), the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Rotary International and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and in collaboration with UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador Amitabh Bachchan, contributed to the almost universal awareness of the need to vaccinate all children under age five against polio. Extensive awareness campaigns were undertaken, vaccination booths were set up and house-to-house campaigning was conducted for remote communities. As a result of these efforts, India was removed from the list of endemic countries in 2014.
       
    9. First-ever all-women Indian peacekeeping contingent in Liberia. India sent the first-ever all-women contingent to peacekeeping mission in Liberia. From 2007 to 2016, nine rotations of all-female police units from India were deployed in Liberia. Their primary responsibilities have been to provide 24-hour guard duty and public order management and to conduct night patrols in and around the capital, Monrovia, while assisting to build the capacity of local security institutions.

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    To learn more, visit: India.UN.org

    UN India Country Team

    Resident Coordinator Office
    UN Entities in India

    UN Key Documents

    UNDAF/United Nations Sustainable Development Cooperation Framework (CP)

    UNDAF / CF START DATE
    01 January 2018
    UNDAF / CF END DATE
    31 December 2022
    START OF NEW CF CYCLE
    01 January 2023