Tajik Activist Demands Youth Inclusion in Climate Talks

The United Nations

A young activist from Tajikistan is speaking up to show that her generation can be part of the solution to combat climate change.

At the end of April, Fariza Dzhobirova attended a Model United Nations Conference on Glaciers' Preservation in Tajikistan's capital, Dushanbe, where she represented Switzerland.

For Ms. Dzhobirova, it was a rehearsal of sorts for the actual High-level Conference on Glaciers' Preservation which began on Thursday in Dushanbe. There, she will serve as a panel member representing her own country.

"The [Model UN] conference gave me a platform to raise my voice, collaborate with like-minded peers from across the region and develop policy recommendations that we hope will influence real-world decisions," she said.

The High-level Conference on Glaciers' Preservation, hosted by the Government of Tajikistan and supported by variety of United Nations agencies, will work to underline the extreme urgency of melting glaciers, elevating it as a global climate and development challenge.

Will glaciers survive the 21st century?

Glaciers, alongside ice sheets, account for over 70 per cent of the world's freshwater resources and are integral to many local economies, providing water, sustaining agriculture and generating energy.

However, due to the increasing temperature of the planet, glaciers are melting at unprecedented rates - scientists predict that if the current rate of melting continues, many glaciers will not survive the 21st century.

In Tajikistan alone, 30 per cent of glaciers have disappeared over the last century, disrupting local and national water supplies and agricultural patterns. And Slovenia and Venezuela have lost all their glaciers.

Just yesterday, one day before the conference was set to begin, a partial glacier collapse in Switzerland buried most of a small village, according to news reports.

"The death of a glacier is more than just the loss of ice," said World Meteorological Organization ( WMO ) Secretary-General Celeste Saulo .

Youth voices are the present and the future

Before the conference, Parviz Boboev from the UN ountry team in Tajikistan sat down with Ms. Dzhobirova to discuss what motivates her climate activism.

Fariza Dzhobirova, a young climate activist from Tajikistan, represents Switzerland at a Model United Nations conference on glacier preservation.
Fariza Dzhobirova, a young climate activist from Tajikistan, represents Switzerland at a Model United Nations conference on glacier preservation.

Parviz Boboev: What inspired you to get involved in the climate movement?

Fariza Dzhobirova: Growing up in Tajikistan, where more than 90% of our freshwater comes from glaciers, I've seen how climate change is already impacting people's lives. Rivers are shrinking, water is becoming less accessible, and natural disasters like landslides and floods are affecting more and more communities.

I've met a family who lost their home because of mudflow. I saw a teenage girl from that family of the same age as me that had totally different problems because of this climate-related disaster. I was thinking about my classes. She was thinking about how to survive.

My message is that young people are not just the future - we are the present, and we are ready to contribute today

And I know there are many examples similar to this - farmers whose land can no longer be irrigated and children whose futures are at risk. Seeing this pain and injustice made it impossible for me to stay silent or uninvolved.

Participating in the upcoming Glaciers' Preservation conference means a lot to me. It's about raising the voices of people who are often left out of global discussions. For me, it's a chance to speak on behalf of my generation and my country, and to show that young people are ready to be part of the solution.

Parviz Boboev: What message do you hope to share at the conference about the impact of climate change on your community and generation?

Fariza Dzhobirova: Being invited to speak is a great responsibility for me. It's a chance to represent not only Tajikistan, but the voice of a generation.

My message is that young people are not just the future - we are the present, and we are ready to contribute today. Climate change is not only about the environment - it's about how we live, how we work, how we learn. It affects our opportunities, our mental health, our ability to plan for the future. And yet, many young people are still excluded from decision-making processes.

At the conference, I want to encourage leaders and policymakers to truly listen not just to the facts and data, but to the experiences and hopes of young people. When you give youth a platform, you don't just invest in their potential - you strengthen the resilience and sustainability of entire communities.

Parviz Boboev: Youth voices are becoming increasingly important in global climate conversations. How do you see the role of young people in shaping solutions?

Fariza Dzhobirova: I truly believe that young people have a unique role to play in shaping more just, inclusive and forward-looking climate solutions. We bring fresh ideas, the courage to question outdated systems and a strong sense of responsibility for the future.

In countries like Tajikistan, where glaciers are directly connected to people's livelihoods, youth are already stepping up. What we need now is more trust and investment in young people. We don't expect to solve everything alone, but we do hope to be included - in dialogue, in decision-making, and in designing real solutions.

Protecting glaciers and water resources is not just a technical challenge; it's a human one. By working together - across generations and borders - we can make our region stronger, more resilient, and more united in the face of climate change.

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