I completely agree Mamoon. At least in the case of national positions. See I keep hearing these stories over and over, and am pretty sure there's quite some truth to it, because essentially its quite commonplace in corrupt countries and systems.
The first point of contact for the applications is a Sudanese HR recruitment guy. If he has a friend or distant relative he's told about the job and would rather have, he just pretends to not have received applications that will rival those of his friend/relative....so they never get on the shortlist for more fair/competent people to see.
Also, they strictly use number of years of experience as a weeder, completely disregarding the quality of that work. If one work properly for 3 years at a high standards with legitimate appraisals, that's trumped by 5 years of mind-numbing, low quality work of someone who can't even write in english properly, who is supposedly fluent.
Finally, there's no weight for education......education in a globally recognized university, vs. a low quality Sudanese school. There just needs to be checks to ensure the first point of contact is competent, able to properly judge and most of all is fair. It benefits everyone in the end, except for the incompetent people that were "hooked up".
Hi im an architecture student from Sudan,seeking vocational training in the UN or other partners in a feild related to my studies, ie enviroment and energy. please advice. thank you
I completelly agree with mamoon and others. I have applied more than ten times and I recieved none reply even to confim my application. I do beleive that UN is unfair giving chances to people from some parts of Sudan!
Global citizen, mamoon and Anonymous,I think you are right :( Corruption and nepotism in this devastating country effect, even, the credibility and transparency of the institutions with cause like UN !!! Impossible requirements are put in vacancies announcement i.e. the experience, and English Language fluency.. Skeptic question about the “credibility of hiring national recruits on fair and equal basis “have been arising with a loud voice and it is unlikely that all these people complain about this issue unless they are completely or partially right!!! It is up to UN to answer it....
There is a better website for jobs at the UN: united nations jobs dot org. Hundreds of jobs are listed every day. Good luck to all! Perseverance is the key here... keep applying!
The UN qualifications are unrealistic unbelievable and untrusted. Because there are persons working with them who are known to us do not really have those higher degrees talked of. For the case of South Sudanese there is great need for UN to positively discriminate.
Thank you for the blog I'm writing to you from Nairobi, Kenya from a consultancy firm. Presently we are recruiting an Investment Manager for an International Organisation and looking for candidates of Sudanese nationality.
Is it possible to have a link on Sudan watch page? Thanks
Thats cool bro! Thanks for sharing such valuable links. I only used to visit Jobs In South Africa but from now onwards this link is also enlisted in my search poll. Keep the Good work up!
I am sure this article has touched all the internet users, its really really good piece of writing on building up new web site. Also visit my site ... click here
Recruitment for UN organizations in most cases are unfair I agree. Even when you ask their employees they say well it is preferred that they get someone they know. It is mind blowing. You can get in via internships here in the Middle East if you do not have a connection. I do not know why they give a job to an intern as opposed to someone with better experience, same education, and better understanding of the host country's culture and language. Wonder if there is a body that would handle such nepotism and injustice if they received complaints. Do UN organizations ever undergo public investigation to monitor the values they have put on paper or is that just a public show. From my experience and my interaction with the employees who were my classmates in language courses, the latter appears true.
Hi Ingrid. Thanks for coming on over. :-) Hey that blogger search engine is pretty cool.
ReplyDeletei dont think the UN offices are fair in their recruitments
ReplyDeletemamoon, I am sorry to hear that. If you write the story of why you feel that way, I could publish it Sudan Watch for some UN visitors to see.
ReplyDeleteI completely agree Mamoon. At least in the case of national positions. See I keep hearing these stories over and over, and am pretty sure there's quite some truth to it, because essentially its quite commonplace in corrupt countries and systems.
ReplyDeleteThe first point of contact for the applications is a Sudanese HR recruitment guy. If he has a friend or distant relative he's told about the job and would rather have, he just pretends to not have received applications that will rival those of his friend/relative....so they never get on the shortlist for more fair/competent people to see.
Also, they strictly use number of years of experience as a weeder, completely disregarding the quality of that work. If one work properly for 3 years at a high standards with legitimate appraisals, that's trumped by 5 years of mind-numbing, low quality work of someone who can't even write in english properly, who is supposedly fluent.
Finally, there's no weight for education......education in a globally recognized university, vs. a low quality Sudanese school. There just needs to be checks to ensure the first point of contact is competent, able to properly judge and most of all is fair. It benefits everyone in the end, except for the incompetent people that were "hooked up".
Hi im an architecture student from Sudan,seeking vocational training in the UN or other partners in a feild related to my studies, ie enviroment and energy.
ReplyDeleteplease advice. thank you
I completelly agree with mamoon and others. I have applied more than ten times and I recieved none reply even to confim my application. I do beleive that UN is unfair giving chances to people from some parts of Sudan!
ReplyDeleteAbdallah
I appreciate the work you are doing for poverty control, I offer myself in anyway to help in this noble cause.please reply me on via email.
ReplyDeleteGlobal citizen, mamoon and Anonymous,I think you are right :(
ReplyDeleteCorruption and nepotism in this devastating country effect, even, the credibility and transparency of the institutions with cause like UN !!!
Impossible requirements are put in vacancies announcement i.e. the experience, and English Language fluency..
Skeptic question about the “credibility of hiring national recruits on fair and equal basis “have been arising with a loud voice and it is unlikely that all these people complain about this issue unless they are completely or partially right!!! It is up to UN to answer it....
There is a better website for jobs at the UN: united nations jobs dot org. Hundreds of jobs are listed every day. Good luck to all! Perseverance is the key here... keep applying!
ReplyDeleteThe UN qualifications are unrealistic unbelievable and untrusted. Because there are persons working with them who are known to us do not really have those higher degrees talked of. For the case of South Sudanese there is great need for UN to positively discriminate.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the blog
ReplyDeleteI'm writing to you from Nairobi, Kenya from a consultancy firm. Presently we are recruiting an Investment Manager for an International Organisation and looking for candidates of Sudanese nationality.
Is it possible to have a link on Sudan watch page? Thanks
I hope to work at any un organizations , but i can not because of unfiar
ReplyDeleteThats cool bro! Thanks for sharing such valuable links. I only used to visit Jobs In South Africa but from now onwards this link is also enlisted in my search poll.
ReplyDeleteKeep the Good work up!
I am sure this article has touched all the internet users, its really really good
ReplyDeletepiece of writing on building up new web site.
Also visit my site ... click here
Recruitment for UN organizations in most cases are unfair I agree. Even when you ask their employees they say well it is preferred that they get someone they know. It is mind blowing. You can get in via internships here in the Middle East if you do not have a connection. I do not know why they give a job to an intern as opposed to someone with better experience, same education, and better understanding of the host country's culture and language. Wonder if there is a body that would handle such nepotism and injustice if they received complaints. Do UN organizations ever undergo public investigation to monitor the values they have put on paper or is that just a public show. From my experience and my interaction with the employees who were my classmates in language courses, the latter appears true.
ReplyDelete