S/RES/2331(2016) SC
Security Council resolution 2331 (2016) [on trafficking in persons in armed conflicts]
15
Yes
0
No
0
Abstentions
| Draft symbol | S/2016/1073 |
|---|---|
| Adopted symbol | S/RES/2331(2016) |
| Category | Human rights |
| UN Document | S/RES/2331(2016) ↗ |
Vote Recorded Vote — S/PV.7847
Full text of resolution
United Nations S/RES/2331 (2016)
Security Council Distr.: General
20 December 2016
Resolution 2331 (2016)
Adopted by the Security Council at its 7847th meeting, on
20 December 2016
The Security Council,
Recalling Presidential Statement 2015/25,
Taking note of the Secretary-General’s reports S/2016/949, as well as
S/2015/203 and S/2016/361,
Recalling its primary responsibility for the maintenance of international peace
and security, in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations,
Recalling the United Nations Convention against Transnational Organized
Crime, and its Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish Trafficking in Persons,
Especially Women and Children, which includes the first internationally agreed
definition of the crime of trafficking in persons and provides a fr amework to
effectively prevent and combat trafficking in persons, and further recalling the
United Nations Global Plan of Action to Combat Trafficking in Persons,
Recognizing that trafficking in persons in areas affected by armed conflict and
post-conflict situations can be for the purpose of various forms of exploitation,
including exploitation of the prostitution of others or other forms of sexual
exploitation, forced labour, slavery or practices similar to slavery, servitude or the
removal of organs; further recognizing that trafficking in persons in armed conflict
and post-conflict situations can also be associated with sexual violence in conflict
and that children in situations of armed conflict and persons displaced by armed
conflict, including refugees, can be especially vulnerable to trafficking in persons in
armed conflict and to these forms of exploitation,
Reiterating the critical importance of all Member States fully implementing
relevant Security Council resolutions, including resolutions 2195 (2014) and 2253
(2015), which express concern that terrorists benefit from transnational organized
crime in some regions, including from the trafficking in persons among others, as
well as 2242 (2015), which expresses concern that acts of sexual and gender -based
violence are known to be part of the strategic objectives and ideology of certain
terrorist groups; and recognizing the connection between trafficking in persons,
sexual violence and terrorism and other transnational organized criminal activities,
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which can prolong and exacerbate conflict and instability or intensify its impact on
civilian populations,
Expressing deep concern that acts of sexual and gender-based violence,
including when associated to trafficking in persons, are known to be part of the
strategic objectives and ideology of certain terrorist groups, used as a tactic of
terrorism and an instrument to increase their finances and their power through
recruitment and the destruction of communities, as described in the relevant
Secretary-General’s Reports; that trafficking in persons, in particular women and
girls, remains a critical component of the financial flows to certain terrorist groups;
and that, when leading to certain forms of exploitation, is being used by these
groups as a driver for recruitment,
Recognizing that trafficking in persons entails the violation or abuse of human
rights, and underscoring that certain acts or offences associated with trafficking in
persons in the context of armed conflict may constitute war crimes; and recalling
further the responsibilities of States to end impunity and to prosecute those
responsible for genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes as well as other
crimes and the need for States to adopt appropriate measures within their national
legal systems for those crimes for which they are required under international law to
exercise their responsibility to investigate and prosecute,
Expressing solidarity with victims of trafficking in persons, including victims
of trafficking in persons in armed conflict and post-conflict situations and in
humanitarian crisis derived from them; noting in this regard the importance of
assistance and services for the physical, psychological and social recovery,
rehabilitation and reintegration; recognizing the extreme trauma experienced by the
victims of trafficking in persons in the context of armed conflict and sexual violence
in conflict, and that humanitarian organizations should consider this vulnerability in
humanitarian planning,
Reaffirming that trafficking in persons in the context of armed conflict,
especially women and girls, cannot and should not be associated with any religion,
nationality, or civilization,
Emphasizing the importance of engaging religious and traditional leaders,
paying particular attention to amplifying the voices of women and girls alongside
men and boys, with the objective of countering terrorism and violent extremism
which can be conducive to terrorism, refuting the justification of trafficking in
persons in the context of armed conflict and sexual or other violence in conflict,
addressing the stigmatization suffered by survivors and facilitating their return and
reintegration in families and communities,
Recalling all its resolutions on children and armed conflict that call for the
protection of children affected by armed conflicts; condemning all violations and
abuses against children in armed conflict and noting in particular that the
recruitment and use of children in violation of applicable international law by
parties to armed conflict can be associated with trafficking in persons; expressing
grave concern over the high numbers of girls and boys among persons trafficked in
armed conflict and their heightened vulnerability to violations and abuses, including
girls and boys who are forcibly displaced by armed conflict, particularly when
separated from their families or caregivers,
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Recalling resolution 2249 (2015), in which the Security Council condemns in
the strongest terms the gross, systematic, and widespread abuses of human rights
and violations of international humanitarian law by ISIL (also known as Daesh), and
resolution 2253 (2015), in which the Security Council condemns in the strongest
terms abductions of women and children, including by ISIL, ANF, and associated
individuals, groups, undertakings and entities, expresses outrage at their
exploitation and abuse, including rape and sexual violence, forced marriage, and
enslavement by these entities, and notes that any person or entity who transfers
funds to ISIL directly or indirectly in connection with such exploitation and abuse
would be eligible for listing by the Security Council Committee established
pursuant to resolutions 1267 (1999), 1989 (2011) and 2253 (2015) concerning ISIL
(Da’esh), Al-Qaida and associated individuals, groups, undertakings and entities,
Noting with concern the criminal misuse of information and communications
technologies, particularly the Internet, to facilitate the trafficking of persons, in
particular the sale and trade, by certain terrorist groups and empha sizing the
importance of countering such use as part of counter-terrorism efforts while
respecting human rights and fundamental freedoms and in compliance with other
obligations under international law,
1. Condemns in the strongest terms all instances of trafficking in persons in
areas affected by armed conflicts, and stresses that trafficking in persons
undermines the rule of law and contributes to other forms of transnational organized
crime, which can exacerbate conflict and foster insecurity and instability and
undermine development;
2. Calls upon Member States:
(a) That have not yet done so, to consider as a matter of priority ratifying or
acceding to and to fully implement the United Nations Convention Agai nst
Transnational Organized Crime and its Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish
Trafficking in Persons, Especially Women and Children, as well as all relevant
international instruments;
(b) To take decisive and immediate action to prevent, criminalize,
investigate, prosecute and ensure accountability of those who engage in trafficking
in persons, including in the context of armed conflict, in which it is particularly
important that evidence of such crimes be collected and preserved so that
investigations and prosecutions may occur;
(c) To investigate, disrupt and dismantle networks involved in trafficking in
persons in the context of armed conflict, in accordance with national le gislation,
including anti-money-laundering, anti-corruption and anti-bribery laws and, where
appropriate, counter-terrorism laws, and underscores in this regard the importance
of international law enforcement cooperation, including with respect to
investigation, documentation, and prosecution of trafficking cases, calls in this
regard for the continued support of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime
(UNODC) and other relevant United Nations entities, and international and regional
bodies, including INTERPOL, as appropriate, in providing technical assistance upon
request and within their existing mandates, and encourages Member States to
consider establishing jurisdiction in line with article 15 of the UN Convention
against Transnational Organized Crime;
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(d) To implement robust victim, and possible victim, identification
mechanisms and provide access to protection and assistance for identified victims
without delay, also in relation to trafficking in persons in armed conflict, including
where such victims are refugees and internally displaced persons (IDPs), and to
address comprehensively victims’ needs, including the provision of or access to
medical, psychosocial assistance and legal aid, as well as ensure that victims are
treated as victims of crime and in line with domestic legislation not penalized or
stigmatized for their involvement in any unlawful activities in which they have been
compelled to engage; calls in this regard for the continued support of UNODC and
other relevant United Nations entities, including UNHCR, as well as international
and regional bodies, including IOM, in assisting Member States, upon request, with
identification of and assistance to trafficking victims;
3. Encourages Member States to:
(a) Build strong partnerships with the private sector and civil society,
including local women organizations, and to redouble their efforts by encouraging
these actors to provide information helping to identify, disrupt, dismantle and bring
to justice individuals and networks involved in trafficking in persons in areas
affected by armed conflict, including by training relevant officials such as law
enforcement personnel, border control officers, labour inspectors, consular or
embassy officials, judges and prosecutors and peacekeepers to identify i ndicators of
trafficking in persons in areas affected by armed conflict in supply chains;
(b) Consider that in some circumstances trafficking in persons in armed
conflict in all its forms and sexual violence in conflict can cause large movements
of refugees and migrants; recalls the Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees
and/or its Protocol relating to the Status of Refugees; and furthermore urges that all
refugee-receiving countries provide information on the services available to victims
of trafficking and sexual violence survivors, ensure sustainable psychosocial
support and provide survivors with the option to document their cases for future
legal action to hold traffickers accountable, and that due consideration is given to
clarifying and securing the legal status of undocumented refugee children, including
refugee children conceived as a result of sexual violence or exploitation, to avoid
situations of possible statelessness;
4. Encourages the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) and FATF-Style
Regional Bodies (FSRBs) to consider including an analysis of financial flows
associated with trafficking in persons that finances terrorism as part of its ongoing
work, in close cooperation with CTED, the Analytical Support and Sanctions
Monitoring Team and with UNODC;
5. Calls on those Member States who have not yet done so to develop the
expertise of their Financial Intelligence Units (FIUs) to analyse cases of trafficking
in persons that finance terrorism, and encourages them to work together to devel op
that capacity, and, in this regard, further encourages Member States and relevant
UN entities and other international and regional organizations to provide other
States which may need so, upon their request, with the financial, material and
technical assistance that they may require to build the capacity mentioned above;
6. Calls on Member States to consider reinforcing legal and regulatory
measures to facilitate the sharing of information, both domestically and
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internationally, between law enforcement and regulatory actors and the private
sector as well as within the private sector, in line with applicable international and
national law, to help identify and detect suspicious financial activity related to
trafficking in persons that finances terrorism, while also recognizing the need to
protect the confidentiality of personal data of victims;
7. Recalls its decision, in resolution 1373 (2001) that all Member States
shall ensure that any person who participates in the financing, planning, preparation
or perpetration of terrorist acts or in supporting terrorist acts is brought to justice,
urges all States to ensure that their domestic laws and regulations establish serious
criminal offenses sufficient to provide the ability to prosecute and penalize in a
manner duly reflecting the seriousness of the offence of trafficking in persons
committed with the purpose of supporting terrorist organizations or individual
terrorists, including through the financing of and recruitment for the commission of
terrorist acts;
8. Stresses that acts of trafficking in persons in armed conflict and sexual
and gender-based violence in conflict, including when it is associated to trafficking
in persons in armed conflict, can be part of the strategic objectives and ideology of,
and used as a tactic by certain terrorist groups, by, inter alia, incentivizing
recruitment; supporting financing through the sale, trade and trafficking of women,
girls and boys; destroying, punishing, subjugating, or controlling communities;
displacing populations from strategically important zones; extracting information
for intelligence purposes from male and female detainees; advancing ideology
which includes the suppression of women’s rights and the use of religious
justification to codify and institutionalize sexual slavery and exert control over
women’s reproduction; and therefore encourages all relevant actors at the national,
regional and international level to ensure that such considerations are taken into
account, in accordance with their obligations under international law and national
laws;
9. Underlines further that achieving the strategic objectives noted above
may entail the use of various forms of sexual violence in conflict, also when
associated with trafficking in persons in the context of armed conflict, including,
inter alia, rape, sexual slavery, forced prostitution and forced pregnancy, and notes
that these different forms of sexual violence in conflict may require tailored
programmatic responses including specialized medical and psychosocial assistance
and analysis as a basis for action;
10. Affirms that victims of trafficking in persons in all its forms, and of
sexual violence, committed by terrorist groups should be classified as victims of
terrorism with the purpose of rendering them eligible for official support,
recognition and redress available to victims of terrorism, have access to national
relief and reparations programmes, contribute to lifting the sociocultural stigma
attached to this category of crime and facilitate rehabilitation and reintegration
efforts; furthermore emphasizes that survivors should benefit from relief and
recovery programmes, including health care, psychosocial care, safe shelter
livelihood support and legal aid and that services should include provision for
women with children born as a result of wartime rape, as well as men and boys who
may have been victims of sexual violence in conflict, including when it is associated
with trafficking in persons in armed conflict;
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11. Condemns all acts of trafficking, particularly the sale or trade in persons
undertaken by the “Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant” (ISIL, also known as
Da’esh), including of Yazidis and other persons belonging to religious and ethn ic
minorities, and condemns also any such trafficking in persons and violations and
other abuses committed by Boko Haram, Al-Shabaab, the Lord’s Resistance Army,
and other terrorist or armed groups for the purpose of sexual slavery, sexual
exploitation, and forced labour, recognizes the importance of collecting and
preserving evidence relating to such acts in order to ensure that those responsible
can be held accountable, and notes that such acts may also contribute to the funding
and sustainment of such groups or to serve other strategic objectives as outlined in
paragraph 5 above;
12. Expresses its intention to consider targeted sanctions for individuals and
entities involved in trafficking in persons in areas affected by armed conflict and in
sexual violence in conflict, and encourages information exchange and other
appropriate forms of cooperation between relevant United Nations entities,
including the Special Representative on Sexual Violence in Conflict and the Special
Representative on Children in Armed Conflict, within their respective mandates,
regarding initiatives and strategies to curb trafficking in persons in the context of
armed conflict;
13. Expresses further its intention to integrate the issue of trafficking in
persons in the areas affected by armed conflict and sexual violence in conflict into
the work of relevant sanctions committees where in accordance with their mandates,
and to ensure that sexual violence in conflict expertise, including when it is
associated with trafficking in persons in the context of armed conflict consistently
informs the work of sanctions committees, and further expresses its intention to
invite the Special Representatives of the Secretary-General on Sexual Violence in
Conflict and on Children and Armed Conflict to brief these sanctions committees, as
necessary, in accordance with the Committee’s rules of procedure, and to provide
relevant information including, if applicable, the names of individuals involved in
the trafficking in persons who may meet the committees’ designation criteria;
14. Requests the Analytical Support and Sanctions Monitoring Team, when
consulting with Member States, to include in their discussions the issue of
trafficking in persons in the areas of armed conflict and the use of sexual vio lence in
armed conflict as it relates to ISIL (also known as Da’esh), Al-Qaida and associated
individuals, groups, undertakings and entities and to report to the Security Council
Committee established pursuant to resolutions 1267 (1999), 1989 (2011) and 2253
(2015) on these discussions as appropriate;
15. Encourages Member States to ensure that existing national strategic
frameworks and national action plans against trafficking in persons national action
plans and other planning frameworks on women and peace and security, developed
through broad consultations, including with civil society, and comprehensive and
integrated national counter-terrorism strategies are complementary and mutually
reinforcing;
16. Requests the Counter-Terrorism Committee Executive Directorate
(CTED), within its existing mandate, under the policy guidance of the Counter-Terrorism Committee (CTC), and in close cooperation with UNODC and other
relevant entities, to include in CTED’s country assessments, as appropriate,
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information regarding Member States efforts to address the issue of traffick ing in
persons where it is committed for the purpose of supporting terrorism, including
through the financing of or recruitment for the commission of terrorist acts;
17. Encourages UNODC and other relevant United Nations entities,
including UNHCR and UNICEF, and other international and regional bodies,
including INTERPOL and the International Organization for Migration (IOM), to
continue supporting upon request, in accordance with their respective mandates and
expertise, Member States efforts to develop such capabilities, including through the
exchange of information and the strengthening of networks for regional and
international cooperation in relation to trafficking in persons in areas affected by
armed conflict; and in this regard, encourages further the above-mentioned entities
and bodies to train their personnel to prevent and respond appropriately to
trafficking in persons in areas affected by armed conflict in all its forms and sexual
violence in conflict; support the tracking and identification of individuals and
groups responsible for the trafficking in persons in the context of armed conflict;
share relevant information to ensure accountability; enhance cooperation in
documentation, extradition and legal assistance and enhance public awareness to
combat trafficking in persons in armed conflict, including when it is associated with
sexual violence in conflict and facilitate accountability;
18. Takes note with appreciation of the efforts undertaken by the Special
Representative on Sexual Violence in Conflict and the Team of Experts on Rule of
Law and Sexual Violence in Conflict to strengthen monitoring and analysis of
sexual violence in conflict, including when associated with trafficking in persons in
armed conflict and post-conflict situations, used as a tactic of war and also as a
tactic by certain terrorist groups, as well as in seeking concrete and time -bound
commitments and implementation plans by all parties to conflict to prevent and
address such crimes in line with resolutions 1960 and 2106, and encourages a more
systematic approach and the acceleration of such efforts; furthermore requests
information, as appropriate, on practical measures undertaken by parties to the
conflict pursuant to the above-mentioned commitments and implementation plans;
19. Further encourages Member States to provide training to all
peacekeeping personnel to be deployed in UN peace operations in conflict and post -
conflict zones on responding to trafficking in persons in the context of armed
conflict, gender expertise, sexual exploitation and abuse prevention and assessing
sexual violence in conflict as a component of predeployment training, and to ensure
that this consideration is integrated into the performance and operational readiness
standards against which troops are assessed;
20. Urges relevant UN agencies operating in humanitarian crises derived
from armed conflict and post-conflict situations to ensure, in accordance with their
respective mandates, that the risk of trafficking in persons in armed conflict i s
considered in protection of civilians and humanitarian needs assessments, that they
build their technical capacity to assess situations for instances of trafficking in
persons in armed conflict and that they work together to identify, prevent and
respond effectively to victims of trafficking; and calls upon the Inter-Agency
Standing Committee to strengthen the humanitarian community’s response to
addressing trafficking in persons in armed conflict and exploitation during a crisis
through existing protection mechanisms and programming;
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21. Invites the Secretary-General to integrate, when relevant, the issue of
trafficking in persons in the context of armed conflict and post -conflict situations in
all its forms as a factor in conflict prevention strategies , conflict analysis, integrated
missions’ assessment and planning, peacebuilding support and humanitarian
response; requests that relevant mission and thematic reporting to the Security
Council includes information relating to trafficking in persons in the context of
armed conflict and recommendations to address it; requests further that the
Secretary-General takes steps to improve the collection of data, monitoring and
analysis of trafficking in persons in the context of armed conflict, in order to better
identify and prevent its incidence;
22. Welcomes further briefings on trafficking in persons in armed conflict, as
necessary, by relevant United Nations entities, including the Executive Director of
UNODC, and other international and regional bodies such as IOM; and encourages
further consideration of the perspective and experience of civil society
representatives, in particular of survivors of trafficking in persons in armed conflict,
in briefings to the Security Council in relevant country-specific considerations and
thematic areas, in accordance with established practice and procedure;
23. Requests the Secretary-General to follow up the implementation of this
resolution and report, within twelve months, on strengthening coordination within
the United Nations system, including through the United Nations’ Inter -Agency
Coordination Group against Trafficking in Persons (ICAT), to preve nt and counter
trafficking in persons in armed conflict in all its forms, and to protect those affected
by armed conflict at risk of being trafficked, especially women and children; and
further requests that this report also consider, inter alia, options f or: strengthening
efforts by existing subsidiary bodies of the Security Council, Security Councilmandated peacekeeping operations and special political missions, in accordance
with their respective mandates, as well as by Member States; data on geographic al
areas, routes or locations where patterns of trafficking in persons in armed conflict
are being developed, in coordination with all relevant UN entities; and
recommendations for UN agencies to mitigate the risk of contributing to trafficking
in persons in armed conflict through procurement and supply chains;
24. Decides to remain actively seized of this matter.
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