S/RES/2322(2016) SC
Security Council resolution 2322 (2016) [on international judicial cooperation in countering terrorism]
15
Yes
0
No
0
Abstentions
| Draft symbol | S/2016/1047 |
|---|---|
| Adopted symbol | S/RES/2322(2016) |
| Category | Terrorism |
| UN Document | S/RES/2322(2016) ↗ |
Vote Recorded Vote — S/PV.7831
Full text of resolution
United Nations S/RES/2322 (2016)
Security Council Distr.: General
12 December 2016
Resolution 2322 (2016)
Adopted by the Security Council at its 7831st meeting, on
12 December 2016
The Security Council,
Recalling its resolutions 1267 (1999), 1333 (2000), 1363 (2001), 1373 (2001),
1390 (2002), 1452 (2002), 1455 (2003), 1526 (2004), 1566 (2004), 1617 (2005),
1624 (2005), 1699 (2006), 1730 (2006), 1735 (2006), 1822 (2008), 1904 (2009),
1988 (2011), 1989 (2011), 2083 (2012), 2129 (2013), 2133 (2014), 2170 (2014),
2178 (2014), 2195 (2014), 2199 (2015), 2214 (2015), 2249 (2015), 2253 (2015) and
2309 (2016),
Reaffirming its commitment to sovereignty, territorial integrity and political
independence of all States in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations,
Reaffirming that terrorism in all its forms and manifestations constitutes one of
the most serious threats to peace and security and that any acts of terrorism are
criminal and unjustifiable regardless of their motivations, whenever, wherever, and
by whomsoever committed,
Reaffirming that terrorism should not be associated with any religion,
nationality, civilization or ethnic group,
Condemning terrorists and terrorist groups, in particular the Islamic State in
Iraq and the Levant (ISIL, also known as Da’esh), Al-Qaida, and associated
individuals, groups, undertakings, and entities, for ongoing and multiple criminal
terrorist acts aimed at causing the deaths of innocent civilians and other victims,
destruction of property, and greatly undermining stability,
Deeply concerned by the increasing number of victims, especially among
civilians of diverse nationalities and beliefs, caused by terrorism motivated by
intolerance or extremism in various regions of the world, reaffirming its profound
solidarity with the victims of terrorism and their families, and stressing the
importance of assisting victims of terrorism and providing them and their families
with support to cope with their loss and grief,
Gravely concerned that in some cases terrorists or terrorist groups, in
particular ISIL, Al-Qaida, and associated individuals, groups, undertakings, and
entities continue to profit from involvement in transnational organized crime, and
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expressing concern that terrorists benefit from transnational organized crime in
some regions, including from the trafficking of arms, persons, drugs, and artifacts,
and from the illicit trade in natural resources including gold and other precious
metals and stones, minerals, wildlife, charcoal and oil, as well as from kidnapping
for ransom and other crimes including extortion and bank robbery,
Expressing concern at the continuing use, in a globalized society, by terrorists
and their supporters, of information and communications technologies, in particular
the Internet, to facilitate terrorist acts, and condemning their use to incite, recruit,
fund, or plan terrorist acts,
Expressing concern also at the continued flow of international recruits to ISIL,
Al- Qaida, and associated groups, and recalling its resolution 2178 (2014) deciding
that Member States shall, consistent with international human rights law,
international refugee law, and international humanitarian law, prevent and suppress
the recruiting, organizing, transporting, or equipping of foreign terrorist fighters and
the financing of their travel and of their activities,
Particularly concerned at the growing involvement of terrorist groups,
especially in areas of conflict, in the destruction and the trafficking in cultural
property and related offences, and recognizing the indispensable role of
international cooperation in crime prevention and criminal justice responses to
combat such trafficking and related offences in a comprehensive and effective
manner,
Reiterating the obligation of Member States to prevent the movement of
terrorists and terrorist groups, in accordance with applicable international law, by,
inter alia, effective border controls, and, in this context, to exchange information
expeditiously, improve cooperation among co mpetent authorities to prevent the
movement of terrorists and terrorist groups to and from their territories, the supply
of weapons for terrorists, and financing that would support terrorists,
Stressing that terrorism can only be defeated by a sustained and
comprehensive approach involving the active participation and collaboration of all
States and international and regional organizations to impede, impair, isolate, and
incapacitate the terrorist threat,
Underlining the importance of strengthening international cooperation,
including by investigators, prosecutors and judges, in order to prevent, investigate
and prosecute terrorist acts, and recognizing the persisting challenges associated
with strengthening international cooperation in combating terroris m including in
stemming the flow of FTFs to and returning from conflict zones, in particular due to
the cross border nature of the activity,
Stressing that the development and maintenance of fair and effective criminal
justice systems should be a fundamental basis of any strategy to counter terrorism
and transnational organized crime,
Recalling that timely cooperation and action, in accordance with international
obligations, can help States to prevent FTFs from travelling to conflict zones,
develop effective strategies to deal with returnees, preserve through law
enforcement and judicial authorities critical evidence for legal proceedings, and
facilitate the implementation of procedures for prosecution,
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Noting the significant increase in the requests for cooperation in gathering
digital data and evidence from the Internet and stressing the importance of
considering the re-evaluation of methods and best practices, as appropriate, in
particular, related to investigative techniques and electronic evidence,
Calling upon Member States to continue exercising vigilance over relevant
financial transactions and improve information-sharing capabilities and practices, in
line with applicable international and national law, within and between governments
through relevant authorities including judicial authorities and channels, including
law enforcement, intelligence, security services, and financial intelligence units, and
also calling upon Member States to improve integration and utilization of financial
intelligence with other types of information available, such as that provided by the
private sector to national governments, to more effectively counter the terrorist
financing threats posed by ISIL, Al-Qaida, and associated individuals, groups,
undertakings and entities, including through actions related to investigative
techniques, evidence gathering and prosecution,
Calling upon Member States to continue information-sharing, through
appropriate channels and arrangements, and consistent with international and
domestic law, on individuals and entities implicated in terrorist activities, in
particular their supply of weapons and sources of material support, and on the
ongoing international counter-terrorism cooperation including among special
services, security agencies and law enforcement organizations and criminal justice
authorities,
Welcoming the efforts by UNODC to upgrade its existing networks of Central
Authorities to encompass the ones responsible for counter terrorism matters,
Recalling that the obligation in paragraph 1(d) of resolution 1373 (2001) also
applies to making funds, financial assets or economic resources or financial or other
related services available, directly or indirectly, for the benefit of terrorist
organizations or individual terrorists for any purpose, including but not limited to
recruitment, training, or travel, even in the absence of a link to a specific terrorist
act,
1. Reiterates its call upon all states to become party to the international
counter-terrorism conventions and protocols as soon as possible, whether or not
they are a party to regional conventions on the matter, and to fully implement their
obligations under those to which they are a party;
2. Reaffirms that those responsible for committing or otherwise responsible
for terrorist acts, and violations of international humanitarian law or violations or
abuses of human rights in this context, must be held accountable;
3. Calls upon States to share, where appropriate, information about foreign
terrorist fighters and other individual terrorists and terrorist organizat ions, including
biometric and biographic information, as well as information that demonstrates the
nature of an individual’s association with terrorism via bilateral, regional and global
law enforcement channels, in compliance with international and domest ic national
law and policy, and stresses the importance of providing such information to
national watch lists and multilateral screening databases;
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4. Recognizes the important role of national legislation in enabling
international judicial and law enforcement cooperation on terrorist-related offences,
and calls upon Member States to enact, and where appropriate, review their
respective counterterrorism legislation in view of the evolving threat posed by
terrorist groups and individuals;
5. Calls upon States to consider, where appropriate, downgrading for
official use intelligence threat data on foreign terrorist fighters and individual
terrorists, to appropriately provide such information to front -line screeners, such as
immigration, customs and border security, and to appropriately share such
information with other concerned States and relevant international organizations in
compliance with international and domestic national law and policy;
6. Emphasizes the importance of States establishing as a serious criminal
offence in their domestic laws and regulations the willful violation of the
prohibition on financing of terrorist organizations or individual terrorists for any
purpose, including but not limited to recruitment, training, or travel, even in the
absence of a direct link to a specific terrorist act, and urges States to exchange
information about such activity consistent with international and national law and
emphasizes further the recent FATF guidance on Recommendation 5 on the
criminalization of terrorist financing for any purpose, in line with resolutions 2199
(2015) and 2253 (2015);
7. Further encourages States to cooperate in the implementation of targeted
financial and travel sanctions against terrorist groups and individual terrorists under
resolution 1373 (2001) and the implementation of targeted financial and travel
sanctions and arms embargo against those listed under 2253 (2015) by sharing
information with other relevant States and international organizations about such
individuals and groups to the greatest degree possible, consistent with international
and national law;
8. Recalls that all States shall afford one another the greatest measure of
assistance in connection with criminal investigations or criminal proceedings
relating to the financing or support of terrorist acts, includi ng assistance in
obtaining evidence in their possession necessary for the proceedings, and urges
States to act in accordance with their obligations under international law, in order to
find and bring to justice, extradite or prosecute any person who suppor ts, facilitates,
participates or attempts to participate in the direct or indirect financing of activities
conducted by terrorists or terrorist groups;
9. Calls upon all States to:
(a) Exchange information, in accordance with international and domestic
law and cooperate on administrative, police and judicial matters to prevent the
commission of terrorist acts and to counter the FTF threat, including returnees;
(b) Consider the possibility of allowing through appropriate laws and
mechanisms, the transfer of criminal proceedings, as appropriate, in terrorist-related
cases;
(c) Enhance cooperation to prevent terrorists from benefiting from
transnational organized crime, to investigate and to build the capacity to prosecute
such terrorists and transnational organized criminals working with them;
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(d) Enhance cooperation to deny safe haven to those who finance, plan,
support, commit terrorist acts, or provide safe havens;
10. Calls upon all States to ensure, in conformity with international law, that
refugee status is not abused by the perpetrators, organizers or facilitators of terrorist
acts, and that claims of political motivation are not recognized as grounds for
refusing requests for the extradition of alleged terrorists;
11. Urges also as a matter of priority that Member States consider, as
appropriate, ratifying, acceding to, and implementing other relevant international
conventions to support international cooperation in criminal matters, such as the UN
Convention against Transnational Organized Crime of 2000 and the Protocols
thereto;
12. Urges States to develop, including, upon request, with the assistance of
UNODC and in close cooperation with UNESCO and INTERPOL, broad law
enforcement and judicial cooperation in preventing and combating all forms and
aspects of trafficking in cultural property and related offences that benefit or may
benefit terrorist or terrorist groups, and to introduce effective national measures at
the legislative and operational levels where appropriate, and in accordance with
obligations and commitments under international law and national instruments, to
prevent and combat trafficking in cultural property and related offences, including
considering to designate such activities that may benefit terrorist or terrorist groups,
as a serious crime in accordance with article 2 of the UN Convention against
Transnational Organized Crime;
13. Calls upon all States to:
(a) Use applicable international instruments to which they are parties as a
basis for mutual legal assistance and, as appropriate, for extradition in terrorism
cases, and encourages States, in the absence of applicable conventions or
provisions, to cooperate when possible on the basis of reciprocity or on a case by
case basis;
(b) Enact and, where appropriate, review and update extradition and mutual
legal assistance laws in connection with terrorism-related offences, consistently
with their international obligations, including their obligations under international
human rights law, and to consider reviewing national mutual legal assistance laws
and mechanisms related to terrorism and updating them as necessary in order to
strengthen their effectiveness, especially in the light of the substantial increase in
the volume of requests for digital data;
(c) Consider strengthening implementation, and where appropriate,
reviewing possibilities for enhancing the effectiveness of their respective bilateral
and multilateral treaties concerning extradition and Mutual Legal Assistance in
criminal matters related to counter-terrorism;
(d) Consider ways within the framework of the implementation of existing
applicable international legal instruments to simplify extradition and MLA requests
in appropriate terrorism-related cases, while recognizing the need for due
consideration, in light of the need to uphold relevant legal obligations;
(e) Designate mutual legal assistance and extradition Central Authorities or
other relevant criminal justice authorities and ensure that such authorities have
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adequate resources, training and legal authority, in particular for terrorism related
offences;
(f) Take measures, where appropriate, to update current practices on MLA
regarding acts of terrorism, including considering, where appropriate, the use of
electronic transfer of requests to expedite the proceedings between Central
Authorities or, as appropriate, other relevant criminal justice authorities with full
respect to existing treaty obligations;
(g) Consider providing UNODC with information for its repository database
with contacts and other relevant details of designated authorities;
(h) Consider developing and participating in regional mutual legal assistance
cooperation platforms and developing and enhancing arrangements for expeditious
cross-regional cooperation for terrorism related offences;
14. Encourages Member States to act cooperatively to prevent terrorists from
recruiting, to counter their violent extremist propaganda and incitement to violence
on the Internet and social media, including by developing effective counter
narratives, while respecting human rights and fundamental freedoms and in
compliance with obligations under international law, and stresses the importance of
cooperation with civil society and the private sector in this endeavor;
15. Calls upon all States, in conformity with international law, to consider
establishing appropriate laws and mechanisms that allow for the broadest possible
international cooperation, including the appointment of liaison officers, police to
police cooperation, the creation/use, when appropriate, of joint investigation
mechanisms, and enhanced coordination of cross-border investigations in terrorism
cases, and also calls upon States to increase, where appropriate, their use of
electronic communication and universal templates, in full respec t for fair trial
guarantees of the accused;
16. Recognizes the proven effectiveness of I-24/7, INTERPOL’s secure
global communication system, as well as its array of investigative and analytical
databases, and its system of notices in the framework of the fight against terrorism,
encourages States to increase the capacity of their National Central Bureaus to
utilize them and to designate a 24 hour/seven days a week point of contact for this
network and to take the necessary measures to ensure its adequate training in its use
to counter terrorism and foreign terrorist fighters, including illicit international
travel;
17. Encourages also States, to consider extending access to, and where
appropriate, integrate into their national systems, the INTERPOL I -24/7 police
information network beyond the National Central Bureaus to other national law
enforcement entities at strategic locations such as remote border crossings, airports,
customs and immigration posts or police stations;
18. Encourages Member States, international, regional and sub-regional
organizations to consider the possibility of developing 24/7 networks to counter
terrorism while taking into account their existing arrangements for cooperation, and
in this regard, takes note of the creation of a 24 hours seven days a week point of
contact cooperation network in the Additional Protocol to the Council of Europe
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Convention on the Prevention of Terrorism (May 2015) to combat terrorism, in
furtherance of the implementation of resolution 2178 (2014);
19. Directs the Counter Terrorism Committee, with the support of CTED to:
(a) Include in its dialogue with international, regional and subregional
organizations and Member States their efforts to promote int ernational law
enforcement and judicial cooperation in counter-terrorism matters and to work
closely with international, regional and subregional organizations and relevant UN
bodies that have developed relevant networks and cross regional cooperation in
order to facilitate international cooperation to counter terrorism and foreign terrorist
fighters, including returnees, particularly by providing analysis on capacity gaps
and recommendations based on CTED’s country assessments;
(b) Identify gaps or trends in current international cooperation among
Member States, including through CTC briefings to exchange information on good
practices, and facilitate capacity building, including through sharing good practices
and exchange of information in this regard;
(c) Work with CTITF entities, in particular UNODC, to identify areas where
it is appropriate to deliver technical assistance to Member States, upon their request,
to implement this resolution, including through the training of prosecutors, judges
and other relevant officials involved in international cooperation, particularly by
providing analysis on capacity gaps and recommendations based on CTED’s country
assessments;
(d) Identify and raise awareness on good practices on international judicial
and law enforcement cooperation in counter-terrorism matters;
20. Requests UNODC to further enhance, in close consultation with the
Counter-terrorism Committee and its Executive Directorate, its provision of
technical assistance to States, upon request, to facilitate the implementation of the
international conventions and protocols related to the prevention and suppression of
terrorism and of relevant United Nations resolutions and further requests UNODC,
together with Member States, to continue to promote, inter alia, international
cooperation in criminal matters related to terrorism, including foreign terrorist
fighters, especially with regard to extradition and mutual legal assistance;
21. Requests the Counter Terrorism Executive Directorate, with the
assistance of UNODC and in consultation with CTITF office to prepare a report on
the current state of international law enforcement and judicial cooperation related to
terrorism, identifying major gaps and providing the Counter Terrorism Committee
with recommendations to address them within ten months;
22. Requests CTC to update the Council in twelve months on the
implementation of this resolution.
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This resolution cites
- S/RES/1267(1999)
- S/RES/1333(2000)
- S/RES/1363(2001)
- S/RES/1373(2001)
- S/RES/1390(2002)
- S/RES/1452(2002)
- S/RES/1526(2004)
- S/RES/1566(2004)
- S/RES/1617(2005)
- S/RES/1624(2005)
- S/RES/1699(2006)
- S/RES/1730(2006)
- S/RES/1735(2006)
- S/RES/1822(2008)
- S/RES/1904(2009)
- S/RES/1988(2011)
- S/RES/1989(2011)
- S/RES/2083 (2012)
- S/RES/2129 (2013)