S/RES/2344(2017) SC
Security Council resolution 2344 (2017) [on extension of the mandate of the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) until 17 Mar. 2018]
72
Session
15
Yes
0
No
0
Abstentions
| Draft symbol | S/2017/222 |
|---|---|
| Adopted symbol | S/RES/2344(2017) |
| Category | Peace and security |
| UN Document | S/RES/2344(2017) ↗ |
Vote Recorded Vote — S/PV.7902
Full text of resolution
United Nations S/RES/2344 (2017)
Security Council Distr.: General
17 March 2017
Resolution 2344 (2017)
Adopted by the Security Council at its 7902nd meeting, on
17 March 2017
The Security Council,
Recalling its previous resolutions on Afghanistan, in particular its resolution
2274 (2016) extending through 17 March 2017 the mandate of the United Nations
Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA),
Stressing the important role that the United Nations will continue to play in
promoting peace and stability in Afghanistan,
Reaffirming its strong commitment to the sovereignty, independence,
territorial integrity and national unity of Afghanistan, as well as its continued
support for the Government and people of Afghanistan as they rebuild their country
and strengthen democratic institutions,
Stressing the central importance of a comprehensive and inclusive Afghan -led
and Afghan-owned political process to support reconciliation for all those who are
prepared to reconcile as laid forth in the Kabul Conference Communiqué and further
elaborated in the Bonn Conference Conclusions, aimed at creating a peaceful and
prosperous future for all the people of Afghanistan and welcoming efforts to
advance the peace process, including via the High Peace Council,
Welcoming the start of the third year of the National Unity Government and
emphasizing the importance of all parties in Afghanistan working within its
framework in order to achieve a peaceful and prosperous future for all the people of
Afghanistan,
Emphasizing the vital role of the Kabul Process and welcoming the strategic
consensus between the Government of Afghanistan and the inter national community
on the Self-Reliance through Mutual Accountability Framework (SMAF),
Stressing the importance of a comprehensive approach to address the security,
economic, governance and development challenges in Afghanistan, which are of an
interconnected nature, and recognizing that there is no purely military solution to
ensure the stability of Afghanistan,
Stressing the crucial importance of advancing regional cooperation in the spirit
of win-win cooperation as an effective means to promote security, stability and
economic and social development in Afghanistan and the region to create a
community of shared future for mankind,
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Recognizing in this regard the positive impact and ongoing importance of
international commitments made in 2016 in the NATO Warsaw Summit and the
Brussels Conference on Afghanistan,
Welcoming the contribution of the International Contact Group (ICG) to the
United Nations efforts in coordinating and broadening international support for
Afghanistan,
Recalling the Government of Afghanistan’s commitments to strengthen and
improve Afghanistan’s electoral process, and emphasizing the need for continued
support of UNAMA, at the request of the Afghan authorities,
Underlining the importance of operationally capable, professional, inc lusive
and sustainable Afghan National Defence and Security Forces (ANDSF) for meeting
Afghanistan’s security needs, stressing the commitment of the international
community to support their further development, and commending the resiliency
and exceptional courage displayed by ANDSF as well as their leading role in
securing their country and fighting against international terrorism,
Noting the ongoing work of the Committee established pursuant to Security
Council resolution 1988 (2011) and the continuation of the cooperation of the
Afghan Government, the High Peace Council and UNAMA with the Committee,
including its Analytical Support and Sanctions Monitoring Team, and expressing its
concern over the increasing cooperation of the Taliban with other organizations
involved in criminal activities,
Recognizing the continuously alarming threats posed by the Taliban, including
the Haqqani Network, as well as by Al-Qaida, ISIL (Da’esh) affiliates and other
terrorist groups, violent and extremist groups and illegal armed groups, as well as
the challenges related to the efforts to address such threats, and expressing its
serious concern over the harmful consequences of violent and terrorist activities by
all the above-mentioned groups on the capacity of the Afghan Government to
guarantee the rule of law, to provide security and basic services to the Afghan
people, and to ensure the improvement and protection of their human rights and
fundamental freedoms,
Expressing serious concern at the presence and potential growth of ISIL
(Da’esh) affiliates in Afghanistan, posing serious threats to the security of
Afghanistan and the countries of the region, including in Central Asia, and affirming
its support to the efforts by the ANDSF to combat them as well as assistance by
Afghanistan’s international partners in this regard,
Expressing concern with the serious threat that anti-personnel mines,
explosive remnants of war and improvised explosive devices (IED) pose to the
civilian population, and noting the need to enhance coordination and information -
sharing, both between Member States and with the private sector,
Expressing its deep concern about the record number of civilian casualties, as
noted in the February 2017 UNAMA report on Protection of Civilians in armed
conflict and condemning the suicide attacks, often in civilian -populated areas, and
the targeted and deliberate killings, in particular of women and girls, including
high-level women officials and those promoting women’s rights, as well as
journalists,
Reaffirming that all parties to armed conflict must take all feasible steps to
ensure the protection of civilians, especially women, children and displaced
persons, including from sexual and gender-based violence, and that perpetrators of
such violence must be held accountable,
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Encouraging the international community and regional partners to further
effectively support Afghan-led sustained efforts to address drug production and
trafficking in a balanced and integrated approach, and recognizing the important
role played by the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) in this
regard,
Expressing serious concern over the humanitarian situation in Afghanistan,
and supporting the Afghan Government’s essential role in the provision of
humanitarian assistance to its citizens in coordination with efficient and effective
delivery by United Nations agencies, funds and programmes,
1. Welcomes the report of the Secretary-General of 3 March 2017
(S/2017/189);
2. Expresses its appreciation for the United Nations’ long-term
commitment, including throughout the Transformation Decade, to support the
Government and the people of Afghanistan and reiterates its full support to the work
of UNAMA and the Special Representative of the Secretary-General, and stresses
the need to ensure continued adequate resourcing for UNAMA to fulfil its mandate;
3. Decides to extend until 17 March 2018 the mandate of UNAMA, as
defined in its resolutions 1662 (2006), 1746 (2007), 1806 (2008), 1868 (2009), 1917
(2010), 1974 (2011), 2041 (2012), 2096 (2013), 2145 (2014), 2210 (2015), 2274
(2016) and paragraphs 5 and 6 below;
4. Recognizes that the renewed mandate of UNAMA is in support of
Afghanistan’s full assumption of leadership and ownership in the security,
governance and development areas, consistent with the Transformation Decade
(2015-2024) and with the understandings reached between Afghanistan and the
international community in the international conferences in Kabul (2010), London
(2010 and 2014), Bonn (2011), Tokyo (2012) and Brussels (2016), and the NATO
Summits held in Lisbon (2010), Chicago (2012), Wales (2014) and Warsaw (2016);
5. Decides further that UNAMA and the Special Representative of the
Secretary-General, within their mandate and in a manner consistent with Afghan
sovereignty, leadership and ownership, will continue to lead and coordinate the
international civilian efforts, in full cooperation with the Government of
Afghanistan and in accordance with the London, Kabul, Tokyo and Brussels
Conferences Communiqués and the Bonn Conference Conclusions, with a particular
focus on the priorities laid out below:
(a) promote, as co-chair of the Joint Coordination and Monitoring Board
(JCMB), more coherent support by the international community to the Afghan
Government’s development and governance priorities, including through supporting
the ongoing development and sequencing of the Government’s reform agenda,
mobilization of resources, coordination of international donors and organizations as
facilitator and co-convener of development policy fora, including in developing and
monitoring frameworks of mutual accountability, promoting coherent information
sharing and analysis, design and delivery of development assistance in a manner
consistent with Afghan sovereignty, leadership and ownership, and direction of the
contributions of United Nations agencies, funds and programmes, in particular for
counter-narcotics, reconstruction and development activities; at the same time,
coordinate also in a manner consistent with the Afghan leadership, ownership and
sovereignty, international partners for follow-up, in particular through information
sharing, prioritize efforts to increase the proportion of development aid delivered
through the Afghan Government, in line with the commitments made at the Kabul
and Tokyo Conferences, and support efforts to increase the mutual accountability
and transparency, and the effectiveness of aid use in line with the commitments
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made at the Kabul, Tokyo and Brussels Conferences, including cost -effectiveness in
this regard;
(b) support, at the request of the Afghan authorities, the organization of
future Afghan elections, including the upcoming parliamentary elections, as well as
to strengthen, in support of the Government of Afghanistan’s efforts, including
electoral reform efforts, the sustainability, integrity and inclusiveness of the
electoral process, as agreed at the London, Kabul, Bonn, Tokyo and Brussels
Conferences and the Chicago Summit; and provide capacity-building and technical
assistance to the Afghan institutions involved in this process in close consultation
and coordination with the government of Afghanistan;
(c) provide outreach as well as good offices to support, if requested by and
in close consultation with the government of Afghanistan, the Afghan-led and
Afghan-owned peace process, including through support to the High Peace Council
and its activities and proposing and supporting confidence -building measures also in
close consultation with the government of Afghanistan within t he framework of the
Afghan Constitution and with full respect for the implementation of measures and
application of the procedures introduced by the Security Council in its resolutions
1267 (1999), 1988 (2011), 1989 (2011) and 2082 (2012), 2083 (2012) and 2255
(2015) as well as other relevant resolutions of the Council;
(d) support regional cooperation, with a view to assisting Afghanistan utilize
its role at the heart of Asia to promote regional cooperatio n, and to work towards a
stable and prosperous Afghanistan, building on the achievements made;
(e) continue, with the support of the Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights, to cooperate with and strengthen the capacity of
the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission (AIHRC), to cooperate
also with the Afghan Government and relevant international and local non -
governmental organizations to monitor the situation of civilians, to coordinate
efforts to ensure their protection, to monitor places of detention, to promote
accountability, and to assist in the full implementation of the fundamental freedoms
and human rights provisions of the Afghan Constitution and international treaties to
which Afghanistan is a State party, in particular those regarding the full enjoyment
by women of their human rights, including the Convention on the Elimination of all
Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW);
(f) closely coordinate and cooperate, where relevant, with the non -combat
Resolute Support Mission agreed upon between NATO and Afghanistan, as well as
with the NATO Senior Civilian Representative;
6. Calls on UNAMA and the Special Representative to further increase
efforts to achieve greater coherence, coordination and efficiency among relevant
United Nations Agencies, Funds and Programmes in Afghanistan based on a “One
UN” approach in close cooperation with the Government of Afghanistan with a
view to maximizing their collective effectiveness in full alignment with the
Government of Afghanistan’s reform agenda, and continue to lead, in a manner fully
consistent with the Afghan leadership, ownership and sovereignty, international
civilian efforts aimed at reinforcing the role of Afghan institutions to perform their
responsibilities, with an increased focus on capacity building in key areas identified
by the Afghan Government, with a view, in all UN programmes and activities, to
move towards a national implementation model with a clear action -oriented strategy
for mutually agreed condition-based transition to Afghan leadership and ownership
including making greater use of country systems, in the following priority areas:
(a) support through an appropriate UNAMA presence, to be determined in
full consultation and cooperation with the Governm ent of Afghanistan, and in
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support of the Afghan Government’s efforts, implementation of the Kabul Process
throughout the country, including through enhanced cooperation with the United
Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, in line with the Government’s polic ies;
(b) support the efforts of the Afghan Government in fulfilling its
commitments as stated at the London, Kabul, Bonn and Tokyo Conferences, to
improve governance and the rule of law including transitional justice, budget
execution and the fight against corruption, throughout the country in accordance
with the Kabul Process and the Self-Reliance through Mutual Accountability
Framework (SMAF), with a view to helping bring the benefits of peace and the
delivery of services in a timely and sustainable manner;
(c) coordinate and facilitate the delivery of humanitarian assistance,
including in support of the Afghan Government and in accordance with
humanitarian principles, with a view to reinforcing the Government’s capacity,
including by providing effective support to national and local authorities in assisting
and protecting internally displaced persons and to creating conditions conducive to
the voluntary, safe, dignified and sustainable return of refugees from neighbouring
and other countries and internally displaced persons, with a particular focus on
development solutions in areas of high returns;
7. Affirms its continuing commitment to UNAMA, and to ensure that the
Mission is able to effectively support Afghanistan, requests the Secretary -General,
in accordance with best practices, to conduct a strategic review of UNAMA,
examining mandated tasks, priorities, and related resources, assessing the mission’s
efficiency and effectiveness, in order to optimize the division of labour and
configuration to ensure better cooperation and minimize duplication with other UN
related organizations, and further requests the Secretary-General to report to the
Security Council on the results of this review by July 2017;
8. Calls upon all Afghan and international parties to coordinate with
UNAMA in the implementation of its mandate and in efforts to promote the security
and freedom of movement of United Nations and associated personnel throughout
the country;
9. Stresses the critical importance of a continued and appropriate presence
of UNAMA and other United Nations Agencies, Funds and Programmes in the
provinces, in close consultation and coordination with and in support of the Afghan
Government, in response to needs and with a view to security and including the
objective of overall United Nations effectiveness;
10. Underscores the importance of a sustainable democratic development in
Afghanistan based on inclusive, transparent and credible elections, welcomes in that
regard the forthcoming organization of parliamentary elections in line with the
relevant international conferences and the commitment of the Government of
Afghanistan to deliver further improvements to the electoral progress and its
ongoing efforts in this regard, and requests that, upon the request of the G overnment
of Afghanistan, UNAMA provide assistance to the relevant Afghan institutions to
support the integrity and inclusiveness of the electoral process, including measures
to enable the full and safe participation of women and requests the Secretary
General to continue to include in his reports to the Security Council relevant
information on the process of integration of women into the political, economic and
social life of Afghanistan and further calls upon members of the international
community to provide assistance as appropriate;
11. Calls on the United Nations, with the support of the international
community, to support the Government of Afghanistan’s reform agenda;
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12. Welcomes the continuing efforts of the Afghan Government to advance
the peace process, including by the High Peace Council and the implementation of
the Afghanistan Peace and Reintegration Programme, to promote an inclusive,
Afghan-led and Afghan-owned dialogue on reconciliation and political
participation, including the participation of women and women’s rights groups, as
laid forth in the Kabul Conference Communiqué on dialogue for all those who as
part of an outcome of such a process renounce violence, have no links to
international terrorist organizations, respect the Constitution , and are willing to join
in building a peaceful Afghanistan, and as further elaborated in the principles and
outcomes of the Bonn Conference Conclusions, and encourages the Government of
Afghanistan to make use of UNAMA’s good offices to support this proc ess as
appropriate, in full respect of the implementation of measures and procedures
introduced by the relevant Security Council resolutions;
13. Stresses the role of UNAMA in supporting, if requested by and in close
consultation with the Government of Afghanistan, an inclusive Afghan -led and
Afghan-owned peace process, while continuing to assess, including in collaboration
with the AIHRC, the impact of the aforementioned peace process, with reference to
the relevant parameters set out in the Kabul Conference Communique’ and the Bonn
Conference Conclusions, and encourages the international community to assist the
efforts of the Government of Afghanistan in this regard;
14. Welcomes and encourages the continuation of the efforts of all regional
and international partners of Afghanistan to support peace and reconciliation in
Afghanistan, in all formats, working toward holding early, direct talks between the
Government of Afghanistan and authorized representatives of Taliban groups, and
calls upon all regional and international partners of Afghanistan to continue these
efforts;
15. Reaffirms the central role played by the JCMB, in a manner consistent
with Afghan leadership, ownership and sovereignty, in coordinating, facilitating and
monitoring the implementation of the Government of Afghanistan’s reform agenda,
and calls upon all relevant actors to enhance their cooperation with the JCMB in this
regard;
16. Reiterates the importance of increasing, in a comprehensive framework,
the functionality, professionalism and accountability of the Afghan security sector in
line with resolution 1325 (2000) and its successor resolutions on Women, Peace and
Security through appropriate vetting procedures, training including on women’s and
children’s rights in support of the implementation of Afghanistan’s 1325 National
Action Plan, and stresses the importance of the commitment by the Government of
Afghanistan and the international community to ensure a capable, professional and
sustainable Afghan National Defence and Security Force (ANDSF);
17. Welcomes in this context the continued progress in the development of
the Afghan National Army and its improved ability to plan and undertake
operations, and encourages sustained training efforts and assistance, including
through the contribution of trainers, resources, advisory teams, advice in developing
a sustainable defence planning process, and assistance in defence reform initiatives;
18. Takes note of the ongoing efforts of the Afghan authorities to enhance the
capabilities of the Afghan National Police, calls for further efforts towards that goal,
including the commitment by the Ministry of Interior and the Afghan National
Police to develop an effective strategy for coordinating increased recruitment,
retention, training and capacity development for women in the Afghan National
Police, fully implement Afghanistan’s 1325 National Action Plan, and further the
implementation of their gender integration strategy, stresses the importance of
international assistance through financial support and provision of trainers and
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mentors, and notes the importance of a sufficient and capable po lice force for
Afghanistan’s long-term security;
19. Reiterates its support for the Government of Afghanistan, and in
particular to the Afghan National Defence and Security Forces (ANDSF), in
securing their country and in their fight against terrorism and violent extremism,
and calls upon the Afghan Government, with the assistance of the international
community, to continue to address the threat to the security and stability of
Afghanistan posed by the Taliban, including the Haqqani Network, as well as by Al
Qaida, ISIL (Da’esh) affiliates and other terrorist groups, violent and extremist
groups, illegal armed groups, criminals and those involved in the production,
trafficking or trade of illicit drugs;
20. Reiterating its concern about the security situation in Afghanistan, in
particular the ongoing region based violence and attacks by the Taliban, including
the Haqqani Network, as well as by Al-Qaida, ISIL (Da’esh) affiliates and other
terrorist groups, violent and extremist groups, illegal armed groups, criminals, and
foreign terrorist fighters, and calls upon all States in this regard to strengthen their
international and regional security cooperation to enhance information -sharing,
border control, law enforcement and criminal justice to better counter t he threat
posed, including from returning foreign terrorist fighters;
21. Condemns in the strongest terms all attacks, including improvised
explosive device attacks, suicide attacks, assassinations and abductions, targeting
civilians and Afghan and international forces and their deleterious effect on the
stabilization, reconstruction and development efforts in Afghanistan, and condemns
further the use by the Taliban, including the Haqqani Network as well as Al -Qaida,
ISIL (Da’esh) affiliates, and by other terrorist groups, violent and extremist groups,
and illegal armed groups of civilians as human shields;
22. Strongly condemns the continued flow of weapons, including small arms
and light weapons (SALW), military equipment and IED components to the Taliba n,
including the Haqqani network, as well as by Al -Qaida, ISIL (Da’esh) affiliates and
other terrorist groups, violent and extremist groups, illegal armed groups and
criminals, and encourages Member States to share information, establish
partnerships and develop national strategies and capabilities to counter IEDs;
23. Further condemns all acts of violence against diplomatic and consular
officials and other representatives of the international community in Afghanistan, as
well as the continued high incidence of attacks against humanitarian and
development workers, including attacks on health-care workers and medical
transports and facilities;
24. Welcomes the achievements to date in the implementation of the Mine
Action Programme of Afghanistan, notably the ratification of Protocol V on
Explosive Remnants of War to the 1980 Convention on Certain Conventional
Weapons, and encourages the Government of Afghanistan, with the support of the
United Nations and all the relevant actors, to continue its efforts towa rds the
removal and destruction of anti-personnel landmines, anti-tank landmines and
explosive remnants of war and to provide assistance for the care, rehabilitation, and
economic and social reintegration of victims;
25. Notes concern over increasing child casualties and recruitment and use of
children and the need for protection of schools and hospitals, reiterates its strong
condemnation of all violations and abuses committed against children in situations
of armed conflict, and calls for those responsible to be brought to justice, in this
context, requests UNAMA to continue to support efforts to strengthen the protection
of children affected by armed conflict, including engagement with the Afghan
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Government to fully implement the Action Plan and Road Map , and actions to
address other violations and abuses, including sexual violence against children, and
requests the Secretary-General to continue to give priority to the child protection
activities and capacity of UNAMA and to include in his future reports the matter of
children and armed conflict in the country in line with the relevant Security Council
resolutions;
26. Calls upon States to strengthen international and regional cooperation to
counter the threat to the international community posed by the p roduction,
trafficking, and consumption of illicit drugs originating in Afghanistan which
significantly contribute to the financial resources of the Taliban and its associates,
in accordance with the principle of common and shared responsibility in address ing
the drug problem of Afghanistan, including through cooperation against the
trafficking in illicit drugs and precursor chemicals, appreciates the work of the Paris
Pact initiative and its “Paris-Moscow” process, as well as the efforts of the Shanghai
Cooperation Organization (SCO), underlines the importance of border management
cooperation, and welcomes the intensified cooperation of the relevant United
Nations institutions with the OSCE, the CSTO, and the Central Asian Regional
Information and Coordination Centre for combating the illicit trafficking of narcotic
drugs, psychotropic substances and their precursors (CARICC) in this regard;
27. Welcomes the continued efforts of the United Nations Office on Drugs
and Crime in empowering the Afghan Ministry of Counter Narcotics-led
implementation of the Afghan National Drug Control Strategy;
28. Reiterates the importance of accelerating the establishment of a fair and
transparent justice system, eliminating impunity and strengthening the rule of law
throughout the country, expresses its appreciation for the anti-corruption
commitments by the Government of Afghanistan and initial measures taken in this
regard, stresses the importance of further progress in the reconstruction and reform
of the prison sector in Afghanistan, in order to improve the respect for the rule of
law and human rights therein, emphasizes the importance of ensuring access for
relevant organizations, as applicable, to all prisons and places of detention in
Afghanistan, and calls for full respect for relevant international law including
humanitarian law and human rights law;
29. Encourages all Afghan institutions, including the executive and
legislative branches, to tackle corruption and to ensure good governance, and
stresses the need for further international efforts to provide technical assistance in
this area;
30. Calls for full respect for and protection for all human rights and
fundamental freedoms, in accordance with international law, including international
humanitarian law, throughout Afghanistan, and notes with concern the continued
restrictions on freedom of media, including attacks against journalists by terrorist as
well as extremist and criminal groups;
31. Calls for enhanced efforts, including on measurable and action-oriented
objectives, to secure the rights and full participation of women and girls and to
ensure that all women and girls in Afghanistan are protected from violence and
abuse, that perpetrators of such violence and abuse are held accountable, and that
women and girls enjoy equal protection under the law and equal access to justice;
32. Calls on international donors and organizations and the Afghan
Government to adhere to their commitments made at the Kabul, Bonn, Tokyo,
London, and Brussels Conferences;
33. Reaffirms its support to the ongoing Afghan-led regional efforts within
the framework of the “Heart of Asia-Istanbul Process on Regional Security and
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Cooperation for a Secure and Stable Afghanistan” and the Regional Economic
Cooperation Conference on Afghanistan (RECCA) Summits, and welcomes ongoing
efforts to build trust and cooperation, including by the Organization of Islamic
Cooperation, Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), Collective Security Treaty
Organization (CSTO), South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation (SAARC),
and Conference on Interaction and Confidence Building Measures in Asia (CICA),
as well as through the Trilateral Summit of Afghanistan, Iran and Pakistan, the
Trilateral Summit of Afghanistan, Pakistan and Turkey, the Trilateral S ummit of
Afghanistan, Pakistan and the UK;
34. Welcomes and urges further efforts to strengthen the process of regional
economic cooperation, including measures to facilitate regional connectivity, trade
and transit, including through regional development initiatives such as the Silk Road
Economic Belt and the 21st-Century Maritime Silk Road (the Belt and Road)
Initiative, and regional development projects, such as the Turkmenistan -
Afghanistan-Pakistan-India (TAPI) gas pipeline project, the Central Asia So uth Asia
Electricity Transmission and Trade Project (CASA-1000), the Chabahar port
project, agreed between Afghanistan, India and the Islamic Republic of Iran, the
Lapis Lazuli Transit, Trade and Transport Route agreement and the Turkmenistan -
Aqina and Herat-Khawaf railway segments, and bilateral transit trade agreements,
expanded consular visa cooperation and facilitation of business travel, to expand
trade, increase foreign investments and develop infrastructure, including
infrastructural connectivity, energy supply, transport and integrated border
management, with a view to promoting sustainable economic growth and the
creation of jobs in Afghanistan and the region, and in this regard urges all relevant
stakeholders to ensure a secure environment, integrate their development policies
and strategies and promote the practical connectivity cooperation for these
development initiatives and trade agreements to be fully implemented;
35. Recalls that regional security cooperation plays a key role in maintaining
stability in Afghanistan and the region, welcomes the progress achieved by
Afghanistan and regional partners in this regard, and calls for further efforts by
Afghanistan and regional partners and organizations, to strengthen their partnership
and cooperation, including to enhance the capabilities of the Afghan security forces
and to enhance security in the region;
36. Expresses its concern over the recent increase in the number of internally
displaced persons in and refugees from Afghanistan, strongly enco urages intensified
efforts by the Government of Afghanistan in making repatriation and reintegration
of Afghan refugees among its highest national priorities including their voluntary,
safe and dignified return, strongly supports the Government of Afghanis tan’s efforts
to create the necessary conditions for the repatriation and sustainable reintegration
of Afghan refugees in the country, and calls for continued and enhanced
international assistance in this regard;
37. Requests that the Secretary-General reports to the Council every three
months on developments in Afghanistan, and to include in his reports an evaluation
of progress made against the benchmarks for measuring and tracking progress in the
implementation of UNAMA’s mandate, including at the subna tional level, and
priorities as set out in this resolution;
38. Decides to remain actively seized of the matter.
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This resolution cites
- S/RES/1267(1999)
- S/RES/1325(2000)
- S/RES/1662(2006)
- S/RES/1746(2007)
- S/RES/1806(2008)
- S/RES/1868(2009)
- S/RES/1917(2010)
- S/RES/1974(2011)
- S/RES/1988(2011)
- S/RES/1989(2011)
- S/RES/2041(2012)
- S/RES/2082 (2012)
- S/RES/2083 (2012)
- S/RES/2096 (2013)
- S/RES/2145 (2014)
- S/RES/2210 (2015)
- S/RES/2255 (2015)
- S/RES/2274 (2016)