The Resident Coordinator (RC) is appointed by the Secretary-General and is usually the most senior United Nations representative and spokesperson in-country. He or she leads the UN Country Team comprised of heads of UN agencies active in the country. The UN system works as a team to develop the best strategy to respond to its host country’s needs and plans.
In Indonesia, the RC also serves as the Humanitarian Coordinator (HC) for emergency relief efforts when disasters strike. During times of crisis, the HC organizes broader coordination forums, reaching out to NGOs, the International Red Cross family (IFRC & ICRC), donors and other international organizations. In these situations, the HC reports directly to the Emergency Relief Coordinator.
In Indonesia, the Resident Coordinator and the Humanitarian Coordinator are the same person – El-Mostafa Benlamlih. The RC/HC is supported by the Office of the Resident/Humanitarian Coordinator (RC/HC Office). The RC/HC Office brings together resources from the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), the Office of the Resident Coordinator as well as other UN agencies. This office also provides support to UN agencies that do not have offices in Indonesia and to the coordination of cross-cutting issues like Avian Influenza, HIV/AIDS and the UN Development Assistance Framework programme (UNDAF).
The UNDAF, which is developed by the UN Country Team, is a common strategic framework for operational activities of the UN system at the country level. In Indonesia, the UNDAF provides a collective, coherent and integrated UN system response to national priorities and needs, including a poverty reduction strategy paper, the Master Plan for Rehabilitation and Reconstruction in the Provinces of Nanggroe Aceh Darussalam and North Sumatra, and the Medium Term Development Plan 2004 – 2009. This is all done within the framework of the Millennium Development Goals, commitments and targets of the international conferences, summits, conventions and rights instruments of the United Nations system. You can find a copy of the UNDAF (2006 – 2010) document for Indonesia here.
There are currently 26 UN agencies, funds and programmes operating in Indonesia. Of these, 15 are members of the Country Team (ILO, ITU, FAO, OCHA, UNAIDS, UNDP, UNESCO, UNFPA, UNHCR, UNIC, UNICEF, UNIDO, UNOPS, WFP, WHO) and 11 have projects and project staff in the country (IAEA, IFAD, IMO, UNCTAD, UNEP, UNESCAP, UNHABITAT, UNIFEM, UNODC, UNV, WTO).
| ILO | International Labour Organization |
| ITU | International Telecommunications Union |
| FAO | Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations |
| OCHA | Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs |
| UNAIDS | Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS |
| UNDP | United Nations Development Programme |
| UNESCO | United Nations Education Scientific & Cultural Organization |
| UNFPA | United Nations Population Fund |
| UNHCR | United Nations High Commission for Refugees |
| UNIC | United Nations Information Center |
| UNICEF | United Nations Children’s Education Fund |
| UNIDO | United Nations Industrial Development Organization |
| UNOPS | United Nations Operations |
| WFP | World Food Programme |
| WHO | World Health Organization |
| IAEA | International Atomic Energy Agency |
| IFAD | International Fund for Agricultural Development |
| IMO | International Maritime Organization |
| UNCTAD | United Nations Conference on Trade and Development |
| UNEP | United Nations Environment Programme |
| UNESCAP | United Nations Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific |
| UNHABITAT | United Nations Human Settlements Programme |
| UNIFEM | United Nations Development Fund for Women |
| UNODC | United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime |
| UNORC | United Nations Recovery Coordinator for Aceh and Nias |
| UNV | United Nations Volunteers |
| WTO | World Trade Organization |
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Indonesia |
UN History |
Country Team |
UN Projects in Indonesia |
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