UN Vehicle Caught Selling Mangoes in Nairobi Sparks Online Fury

    A UN vehicle caught selling mangoes on the streets of Nairobi at night has left Kenyans furious and laughing in equal measure after a video went viral overnight.

    The clip, shared widely on X, Facebook, TikTok, and Instagram starting around February 25, shows a black SUV with clear United Nations number plates parked under street lights. From the back, someone unloads crates of ripe mangoes, calling out to passersby like any roadside hawker.

    The scene plays out in what looks like a busy Nairobi spot – perhaps along Thika Road or one of the city’s night markets – with cars honking past and people stopping to buy or just stare.

    The video lasts under a minute but packs a punch. Comments exploded fast. “How did a UN car end up hustling mangoes?” one user asked. Another wrote, “Diplomats now doing side gigs? Times are tough even for internationals.”

    Plenty joked about the perks of UN plates – no traffic stops, easy parking – now turned into a fruit-selling advantage. Others got serious quick, questioning misuse of official vehicles meant for aid work, peacekeeping, or agency duties in Kenya.

    Kenya hosts one of the biggest UN presences in Africa. Agencies like UNHCR, UNICEF, WFP, and UNEP run offices here, with fleets of black SUVs bearing those famous red-and-white plates.

    These cars get tax breaks, diplomatic immunity in many cases, and priority on roads because they support refugees, health programs, food distribution, and climate projects. Seeing one turned into a mobile mango stand feels like a slap to that image.

    No one has confirmed who owns or drives the vehicle yet. The plates look genuine in the footage, but without a clear view of the full registration, it’s hard to pin down if it belongs to an agency staffer, a contractor, or someone who borrowed (or worse) the car.

    UN rules strictly ban personal use of official vehicles, especially for business. If this turns out real, heads could roll – from the driver up to whoever signed off on the keys.

    The timing adds salt to the wound. Mango season peaks around now, with farmers in places like Makueni and Coast pushing hard to sell their harvest. Street vendors everywhere battle for customers, paying taxes or bribes to stay put.

    Meanwhile, UN staff earn solid salaries, often tax-free, with housing allowances and transport perks. The contrast stings. “While locals struggle to make ends meet, UN guy sells mangoes tax-free?” one popular reply read. Another said, “This is why people lose faith in aid organisations.”

    Some share old stories of UN vehicles spotted at malls or beaches on weekends, hinting this isn’t the first time rules got bent. A few defend the driver – maybe it’s a local staffer supplementing income in hard times – but most call for accountability. Calls mount for the UN mission in Nairobi to investigate and explain.

    The UN country team has not issued any statement yet. Past incidents involving misuse of plates – like accidents or traffic violations – usually prompt quick internal probes and apologies.

    If this video holds up, expect similar action soon. For now, the clip circulates wider, drawing laughs from some and real frustration from others who see it as another sign of double standards in a city where inequality shows up everywhere.

    Nairobi never sleeps, and its streets tell stories every night. This one, with a UN twist, has everyone talking. Whether it ends with a quiet reprimand or bigger changes to vehicle rules, the mango seller in the black SUV has given Kenyans plenty to chew on.