Hannah Kollen, President of the General Assembly at THIMUN Qatar addressing the opening ceremony.
The United Nations has been called on to recognise ‘the untapped potential of thousands of passionate teenagers around the world’, as over 1,900 people from 14 countries gathered at Qatar Foundation for an international showcase of youth diplomacy and leadership.
The ninth annual THIMUN Qatar Conference, which opened yesterday, is giving high school students from the Middle East, Asia, Africa, and Europe the opportunity to bring their voices to global conversations as they participate in simulations of 17 United Nations (UN) forums at Qatar National Convention Centre.
Organised by the THIMUN Qatar Regional Office – which comes under Qatar Foundation’s Pre-University Education (PUE), and was created as a joint project with the THIMUN (The Hague International Model United Nations) Foundation – the conference sees young people aged 14-18 share ideas and experiences, tackle key international issues, and represent the policies of their assigned country in scenarios that replicate committees such as the UN General Assembly and UN Security Council.
During the opening ceremony, Hannah Kollen, President of the General Assembly at THIMUN Qatar and a Grade 12 student at the American School of Doha, read delegates her letter to the UN illustrating the changes she wants to see in the world and the role of youth in making them happen – urging others to write their own.
“We may not be policymakers, entrepreneurs, or scientists yet, but we are demanding that we be taken seriously now. Leaders of tomorrow’ is a phrase which is used to address high school students over and over, but why can’t we be the leaders of today,” said Kollen.
Following the Parade of Nations, where young delegates carry the flags of nations around the world, the conference – which continues until January 24 and has the 2020 theme of Good Health and Wellbeing, in line with UN Sustainable Development Goal 3 – heard THIMUN Qatar Secretary General Tianne Pane describe it as ‘a platform for us to come together to incubate ideas that we can take back into our community’.
“This is where you build relationships that shape future diplomats, entrepreneurs, scientists – people who see the interdisciplinary nature of everything, people at the heart of driving positive global change,” she told delegates. In his keynote speech, author and happiness and wellbeing expert Dr. Andy Cope said: “I have spent the last 15 years of my life researching a subject called positive psychology, which is basically the signs of happiness. Mental health is what I call mental wealth, when your happiness is bigger than you. That is what positive psychology gives you.”
The opening ceremony also heard from Frederique de Man, Chargé d’Affaires of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in Qatar, Fatima El Mahdi, Head of THIMUN Qatar, and Hend Al Delaimi, a student and wellness ambassador at Qatar Academy Sidra – part of PUE.