7 – SMUN 18′
COMMITTEE: DISEC
AGENDA: The Yemen Crisis
COUNTRY: Senegal
VENUE: Sanskriti School, Delhi
AWARD: OUTSTANDING DELEGATE
6 – U&MUN 18′
COMMITTEE: UNSC (United Nations Security Council)
AGENDA: The South China Sea
COUNTRY: Russian Federation
VENUE: JPIS, Jaipur
AWARD: OUTSTANDING DELEGATE
5 – WIMUN 18′
COMMITTEE: Sixth High School General Assembly
AGENDA: Women and Child Rights
COUNTRY: Bolivia
VENUE: The United Nations, New York
AWARD: BEST DELEGATE
4 – JPHSMUN 17′
COMMITTEE: UNSC (United Nations Security Council)
AGENDA: SELF-DETERMINATION
COUNTRY: ITALY
VENUE: JPHS, JAIPUR
AWARD: SPECIAL MENTION
3 – U&MUN 17′
COMMITTEE: UNHSC (Historic Security Council)
AGENDA: THE SUEZ CRISIS
COUNTRY: FRANCE
VENUE: JPIS, JAIPUR
AWARD: OUTSTANDING DELEGATE
This was the first time the executive board was executed me, they tried to obliterate me, roast me, hurt me, damage me and harm me and I had to withstand it, along with Britain.
There were 13 crises in committee, and 11 of them were directed against me. Never ever will I face such immense odds.
2 – HMUN 17′
COMMITTEE: SOCHUM
AGENDA: MISSING CHILDREN
COUNTRY: INDONESIA
VENUE: HICC, HYDERABAD
AWARD: NONE
Firstly, HMUN is the biggest MUN in India, and perhaps one of the best in the world too. The level of debate is as high as it can get, as they say, “The sky’s the limit.” The experience at HMUN was well, fantastic but in reality, it was tough, I was in a GA, and in HMUN, committees have almost maximum attendance, my committee had an attendance of 191 out of 193. Recognition was pretty hard, and in the end, I spoke for only 300 seconds in total in a grand sum of 20 hours, it was frustrating.
Unmoderated Caucuses were the holy grail, and they were pretty tough too. For a first-timer, I did pretty well. I made a bloc of about 20 people for starters, then merged it with another bloc, so I then had 40 delegates in my bloc. Then, due to the law of Bloc Expansion, our bloc size increased to 55 delegates before the delegate of Israel committed a mistake so grave that it was the main factor behind me losing power and not winning anything. She went over to a Bishop Cottins delegate, who had a bloc of 30 delegates and gave him our draft resolution in a pen drive(Yes, BISHOP COTTINS delegate!!!). With this, our bloc merged, he gradually pushed me out of power and his bloc members took over our bloc. With lack of power, I had no say in decisions whatsoever now. The Cottins delegate then merged with another giant bloc. In the end, our bloc size was 115 delegates. it was pretty irritating, being a sponsor but one without any power or say, pretty ironic too.
1 – SFHS MUN 17′
COMMITTEE: NATO (North Atlantic Treaty Organisation)
AGENDA: MILITARY POLICIES WITH SPECIAL EMPHASIS ON THE CRIMEAN CRISIS
COUNTRY: SPAIN
VENUE: SFHS, CHANDIGARH
AWARD: SPECIAL MENTION
MUNs are tough, especially first MUNs, and this one was no less. The level of debate was pretty good for a first-timer, and I could feel the weight of the expectations from me. This MUN can perhaps be the most memorable MUN of my life, it brought out my MUN skills in a way no other MUN can do. After the first session, I had gotten the hang of things and then I just went bang, speaking aggressively against people left and right, speaking up to six times in moderated caucuses and leading the committee. My downfall came when the crisis director introduced a crisis, and I violated my foreign policy by going against France. Everyone in the committee roasted me, I had no chance left.
In the end, I thought I deserved Outstanding Delegate.