United Nations Cameroon Country Team Annual Retreat 2026: A Moment of Strategic Renewal
The retreat provided a safe space to confront these realities and to position the UN as a catalyst for systemic and sustainable change
From 3 to 5 February 2026, the United Nations Country Team (UNCT) in Cameroon gathered at Hôtel United in Yaoundé for its annual retreat. More than a routine institutional gathering, the retreat marked a deliberate pause—an opportunity to reflect, recalibrate, and renew collective ambition at a critical juncture for both Cameroon and the UN system.
Setting the Scene
Cameroon stands at a complex crossroads. The country continues to navigate the aftershocks of the COVID-19 pandemic, global geopolitical tensions, volatile commodity markets, and tightening fiscal space. Security challenges in the North West, South West, and Far North weigh heavily on communities, while poverty and inequality remain pressing concerns. Yet, amid these difficulties, opportunities are emerging: sustainable food systems, inclusive industrialization, renewable energy expansion, investment in human capital, digital transformation, and climate adaptation.
The retreat provided a safe space to confront these realities and to position the UN as a catalyst for systemic and sustainable change and daring to dream of envision what comes next.
Voices Around the Table
The opening day brought together representatives from the Government of Cameroon, technical and financial partners, and members of the diplomatic corps. Their presence underscored the importance of collaboration and reinforced a central message: the UN’s work in Cameroon is inseparable from a broader ecosystem of national and international actors committed to shared development goals.Their presence underscored the importance of collaboration and reinforced the idea that the UN’s work in Cameroon is part of a broader collective effort. Their participation reinforced a central message: the UN’s work in Cameroon is inseparable from a broader ecosystem of national and international actors committed to shared development goals.
Over three days, UNCT members engaged in deep conversations. They asked hard questions: How can the UNCT sharpen its collective impact and avoid fragmentation? How do we ensure that our work truly reaches those most in need? How do we prepare for the next Cooperation Framework to be more systemic, integrated, and future-oriented?
Strategic Commitments for 2026
The UNCT agreed on a focused set of time-bound priority actions for 2026, each assigned clear leadership, deliverables, and monitoring mechanisms under the UNCT governance structure.
Key commitments includeThe UNCT pledged to:
• Mobilize and diversify resources through innovative financing instruments and stronger public private partnerships.
• Accelerate digital transformation and UN2.0 principles, integrating AI, data, and foresight into programming and operations.
• Strengthen internal and external coordination, supported by clear performance indicators and enhanced Delivering as One mechanisms.
• Prepare strategically for the next Cooperation Framework (2027–2031), anchored in the 5Ps: People, Prosperity, Peace, Planet, Partnership.
• Promote inclusion and gender equality.
• Build staff capacities in areas like AI and strategic foresight.
• Enhance strategic communication, storytelling, and visibility to strengthen credibility and stakeholder trust.
To ensure accountability, these commitments will be monitored through a dedicated reporting framework, under the oversight of the UNCT and with operational follow-up by the Programme Management Team (PMT).
A Human Centered Vision
Beyond frameworks and strategic matrices, the retreat placed people at the center of the conversation. Discussions focused on addressing structural drivers of vulnerability, ensuring sustainable humanitarian transitions, and positioning youth and women not merely as beneficiaries, but as agents of transformationon how to address the root causes of vulnerability, ensure humanitarian transitions are sustainable, and place youth and women at the heart of change.
As one participant reflected: “This retreat reminds us that our work is not only about numbers—it is about lives, hopes, and futures.”
Looking Ahead
The Yaoundé retreat concluded with renewed clarity, collective ownership, and strengthened governance mechanisms. The commitments made will guide the UNCT through 2026 and lay the foundation for the next Cooperation Framework.
In a context of global uncertainty and national complexity, the retreat reaffirmed a simple yet powerful conviction: Cameroon’s path toward sustainable emergence must be built collectively—with resilience, accountability, solidarity, and a steadfast commitment to leave no one behind.