A/RES/2269(XXII) GA
The Korean question : resolution / adopted by the General Assembly
22
Session
68
Yes
23
No
26
Abstentions
| Draft symbol | A/RES/2269(XXII) |
|---|---|
| Adopted symbol | A/RES/2269(XXII) |
| P5 Positions |
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| UN Document | A/RES/2269(XXII) ↗ |
Vote Recorded Vote — A/PV.1598
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Argentina
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Australia
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Austria
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Barbados
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Belgium
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Plurinational State of Bolivia
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Botswana
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Brazil
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Canada
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Central African Republic
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Chad
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Chile
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China
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Colombia
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Costa Rica
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Benin
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Denmark
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Dominican Republic
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Ecuador
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El Salvador
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Ethiopia
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France
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Gabon
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Gambia
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Greece
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Guatemala
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Guyana
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Haiti
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Honduras
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Iceland
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Islamic Republic of Iran
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Ireland
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Israel
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Italy
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Côte d'Ivoire
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Jamaica
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Japan
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Lao People's Democratic Republic
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Lesotho
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Liberia
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Luxembourg
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Madagascar
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Malawi
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Malaysia
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Malta
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Mexico
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Netherlands
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New Zealand
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Nicaragua
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Niger
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Norway
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Panama
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Paraguay
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Peru
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Philippines
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Rwanda
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Saudi Arabia
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South Africa
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Spain
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Sweden
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Thailand
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Togo
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Trinidad and Tobago
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Türkiye
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United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
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United States of America
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Uruguay
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Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela
Full text of resolution
Re10lutiona adopted on the report■ of the Flnt Committee
2269 (XXII). The Korean question
The General Assembly,
Having noted the report of the United Nations Com-
mission for the Unification and Rehabilitation of Korea,
signed at Seoul, Korea, on 26 August 1%7,8
Reaffirming its resolution 2224 (XXI) of 19 Decem-
ber 1%6, and previous resolutions on the Korean
question noted therein,
Recognizing that the continued division of Korea
does not correspond to the wishes of the Korean people
and constitutes a source of tension which prevents the
full restoration of international peace and security in
the area,
Recalling that the United Nations, under the Charter,
is fully and rightfully empowered to take collective
action to maintain peace and security and to extend
its good offices in seeking a peaceful settlement in
Korea in accordance with the principles and purposes
of the Charter,
Hopeful that conditions can soon be created to fa-
cilitate the reunification of Korea on the basis of the
freely expressed will of all the Korean people,
1. Reaffirms that the objectives of the United Na-
tions in Korea are to bring about, by peaceful means,
the establishment of a unified, independent and demo-
cratic Korea under a representative form of govern-
ment, and the full restoration of international peace
and security in the area ;
2. Expresses the belief that arrangements should be
made to achieve these objectives through genuinely
free elections held in accordance with the relevant
resolutions of the General Assembly;
3. Requests the United Nations Commission for the
Unification and Rehabilitation of Korea to intensify
its efforts to achieve these objectives and to continue
to carry out the tasks previously assigned to it by the
General Assembly ;
4. Notes that the United Nations forces which were
sent to Korea in accordance with United Nations reso-
lutions have in greater part already been withdrawn,
that the sole objective of the United Nations forces
presently in Korea is to preserve the peace and security
of the area, and that the Governments concerned are
prepared to withdraw their remaining forces from
Korea whenever such action is requested by the Re-
public of Korea or whenever the s:onditions for a last-
ing settlement formulated by the General Assembly
have been fulfilled.
1598th plenary meeting,
16 November 1967.
2286 (XXII). Treaty for the Problbition of
Nuclear Weapons in Latin America
The General Assembly,
Recalling that in its resolution 1911 (XVIII)· of 27
November 1963 it expressed the hope that the States
of Latin America would carry out studies and take
appropriate measures to conclude a treaty that would
prohibit nuclear weapons in Latin America,
Recalling al3o that in the same resolution it voiced
its confidence that, once such a treaty was concluded,
all States, and particularly the nuclear Powers, would
1 Official Rteonh of lht Gtntt'al ~111mbly, Tw1nly-11cond
S11llon, SNttltmtnl No. 12 (A/6712 and Corr.I).
lend it their full co-operation for the effective reali-
zation of its peaceful aims,
Considerin_q that in its resolution 2028 (XX) of 19
November 1%5 it established the principle of an
acceptable balance of mutual responsibilities and obliga-
tions of the nuclear and non-nuclear Powers,
Bearing in mind that in its resolution 2153 A (XXI)
of 17 November 1%6 it expressly called upon all
nuclear-weapon Powers to refrain from •the use, or
the threat of use, of nuclear weapons against States
which might conclude regional treaties in order to
ensure the total absence of nuclear weapons in their
respective territories,
Noting that that is precisely the object of the Treaty
for the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons in Latin
America,9 signed at Tlatelolco, Mexico, by twenty-one
Latin American States, which are convinced that the
Treaty will constitute a measure that will spare their
peoples the squandering of their limited resources on
nuclear armaments and will protect them against pos-
sible nuclear attacks on their territories, that it will
be a stimulus to the peaceful use of nuclear energy in
the promotion of economic and social development and
that it will act as a significant contribution towards
preventing the proliferation of nuclear weapons and as a
powerful factor for general and complete disarmament,
Noting that it is the intent of the signatory States
that all existing States within the zone defined in the
Treaty may become parties to the Treaty without any
restriction,
Taking note of the fact that the Treaty contains
two additional protocols open, respectively, to the signa-
ture of States which, de jure or de facto, are interna-
tionally responsible for territories which lie within the
limits of the geographical zone established in the Treaty
and to the signature of States possessing nuclear
weapons, and convinced that the co-operation of such
States is necessary for the greater effectiveness of the
Treaty,
1. Welcomes with special satisfaction the Treaty for
the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons in Latin America,
which constitutes an event of historic significance in the
efforts to prevent the proliferation of nuclear weapons
and to promote international peace and security and
which at the same time establishes the right of Latin
American countries to use nuclear energy for demon-
strated peaceful purposes in order to acceli!rate the
economic and social development of their peoples;
2. Calls upon all States to give their full co-operation
to ensure that the regime laid down in the Treaty en-
joys the universal observance to which its lofty prin-
ciples and noble aims entitle it ;
3. Recommends States which are or may become
signatories of the Treaty and those contemplated in
Additional Protocol I of the Treaty to strive to take
all the measures within their power to ensure that the
Treaty speedily obtains the widest possible applica-
tion among them;
4. Invites Powers possessing nuclear ·weapons to
sign and ratify Additional Protocol II of the Treaty
as soon possible.
8 See A/6«,J.
1620th plnsary meeting,
5 December 1967.
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