S/RES/2474(2019) SC
Security Council resolution 2474 (2019) [on persons missing as a result of armed conflict]
15
Yes
0
No
0
Abstentions
| Draft symbol | S/2019/475 |
|---|---|
| Adopted symbol | S/RES/2474(2019) |
| Category | Human rights |
| UN Document | S/RES/2474(2019) ↗ |
Vote Recorded Vote — S/PV.8543
Full text of resolution
United Nations S/RES/2474 (2019)
Security Council Distr.: General
11 June 2019
Resolution 2474 (2019)
Adopted by the Security Council at its 8543rd meeting, on
11 June 2019
The Security Council,
Guided by the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations,
Recalling its primary responsibility under the Charter of the United Nations for
the maintenance of international peace and security, and in this context, the need to
promote respect for the rules and principles of international humanitarian law,
Reaffirming the importance of addressing the root causes of armed conflicts to
achieve sustainable peace and security, by dialogue, mediation, consultations and
political negotiations to bridge differences and to end conflicts,
Recalling international law relevant to the issue of missing persons as a result
of armed conflict, consistent with international humanitarian law, in particular the
Geneva Conventions of 12 August 1949 and the Additional Protocols thereto of 1977,
and further recalling the obligation of States Parties to the 1949 Geneva Conventions
to respect and ensure respect for the Conventions in all circumstances,
Recalling all relevant Security Council resolutions, including resolutions 1265
(1999), 1296 (2000), 1674 (2006), 1738 (2006), 1894 (2009), 2222 (2015) and 2286
(2016) on the protection of civilians in armed conflict, as well as relevant statements
of its President related to the protection of civilians in armed conflict,
Recalling all relevant Security Council resolutions, including res olutions 2417
(2018), 2175 (2014) and 1502 (2003) on the protection of humanitarian personnel,
Recalling further General Assembly resolution 73/178 entitled “Missing
Persons”,
Noting the report of the Secretary-General on the Protection of Civilians in
Armed Conflict of 07 May 2019 (S/2019/373), and the relevant conclusions contained
therein,
Noting that this year marks the 70th anniversary of the Geneva Conventions of
1949, which together with their Additional Protocols are a key part of the legal
framework for the protection of civilians in armed conflict,
Noting further that this year also marks the 20th anniversary of the progressive
consideration by the Security Council of the protection of civilians in armed conflict
19-09430 (E)
*1909430*
S/RES/2474 (2019)
as a thematic issue; and acknowledging the enduring need for the Security Council
and Member States to strengthen further the protection of civilians in armed conflict,
Urging States which have not yet done so to consider becoming parties to
Additional Protocols I and II of 1977 to the Geneva Conventions at the earliest
possible date,
Reaffirming that parties to armed conflict bear the primary responsibility to take
all feasible steps to ensure the protection of civilians and recalls that States bear the
primary responsibility to respect and ensure the human rights of all individuals within
their territory and subject to their jurisdiction, as provided for by relevant
international law,
Stressing the important contribution of measures to prevent persons from going
missing as a result of armed conflict, including, inter alia; enacting national
legislation, ensuring detainee registration, providing appropriate training for armed
forces, producing and providing proper means of identification, including for
members of armed forces, the establishment of national information bureaus upon the
outbreak of an armed conflict, grave registration services and registers of deaths and
ensuring accountability as appropriate in cases of missing persons,
Cognizant of the great scientific and technological progress which has
significantly increased the efficacy of the search for and identification of missing
persons including through, inter alia; forensic sciences, DNA analysis, satellite maps
and imagery, and ground penetrating radar,
Emphasizing the importance of the principles of humanity, neutrality,
impartiality and independence in the provision of humanitarian assistance and
reaffirming also the need for actors engaged in the provision of such assistance in
situations of armed conflict to promote and fully respect these principles; and recalls,
in this regard, the statement of its President of 9 March 2000 ( S/PRST/2000/7),
Reiterating strong support for the efforts of the international organizations, in
particular, International Committee of the Red Cross in addressing the issue of
missing persons, consistent with the Geneva Conventions of 1949 and their
Additional Protocols of 1977, and appreciating the work of the national, regional and
international organizations and mechanisms in this field,
Expressing its concern about the dramatic increase in persons reported missing
as a result of armed conflict, which entails consequences for the missing persons
themselves and for their families, especially women and children, and communities
in the immediate and long-term, and reaffirming in this regard the importance of
allowing families to know the fate and whereabouts of their missing relatives,
consistent with applicable international humanitarian law, which is of crucial
humanitarian importance,
Recognizing that it is critical for States to address the issue holistically, from
prevention to tracing the location, identifying missing persons and returning human
remains to their families, without adverse distinction, that informed and early acti on
is crucial for addressing cases of missing persons in an effective and credible manner,
and that the manner in which these cases are addressed affects relations between
parties to armed conflict and efforts to resolve conflicts,
Recognizing the importance of truth, justice and accountability in efforts
towards reconciliation and the peaceful settlement of conflicts, and the end of
impunity,
Acknowledging that full and timely support for humanitarian components can
be critical in ensuring and enhancing the sustainability of any peace agreement and
post-conflict peacebuilding and emphasizes the importance of inclusion of
2/4 19-09430
S/RES/2474 (2019)
humanitarian elements in peace negotiations and agreements, including the issue of
prisoners of war, detainees and missing persons and others protected by international
humanitarian law,
1. Reaffirms its strong condemnation of the deliberate targeting of civilians
or other protected persons in situations of armed conflict, and calls upon all parties to
armed conflict to put an end to such practices, in accordance with their obligations
under international humanitarian law;
2. Calls upon parties to armed conflict to take all appropriate measures, to
actively search for persons reported missing, to enable the return of their remains,
and to account for persons reported missing without adverse distinction and to put in
place appropriate channels enabling response and communication with families on
the search process, and to consider the provision of information on available services
in relation to administrative, legal, economic and psychosocial difficulties and needs
they may face as a result of having a missing relative, including through an interaction
with competent national and international organizations and institutions;
3. Calls upon parties to armed conflict to take appropriate measures to
prevent persons from going missing as a result of armed conflict, through the
facilitation of the reunion of families dispersed as a result of armed conflict, and to
allow for the exchange of family news, consistent with their international obligations;
4. Calls upon parties to armed conflict to pay the utmost attention to cases of
children reported missing as a result of armed conflict, and to take appropriate
measures to search for and identify those children;
5. Calls upon parties to armed conflict to register and notify the personal
details of persons deprived of their liberty, including prisoners of war, as a result of
armed conflict, and belonging to the adverse party, and allow them to correspond with
their families, consistent with their international obligations;
6. Further calls upon States, in cases of missing persons as a result of armed
conflict, to take measures, as appropriate, in order to ensure thorough, prompt,
impartial and effective investigations and the prosecution of offences linked to
missing persons as a result of armed conflict, in accordance with national and
international law, with a view to full accountability;
7. Urges parties to armed conflict to collect, protect, and manage all relevant
data and documents on missing persons as a result of armed confl ict while respecting
privacy, consistent with applicable national and international law;
8. Urges parties to armed conflict to search for and recover the dead as a
result of armed conflict, identify them, including by recording all available
information and mapping the location of burial sites, to respect the remains of the
dead, including by respecting and properly maintaining their graves, and to return
them, whenever possible, to their relatives, consistent with applicable obligations
under international humanitarian law and human rights law; as it relates to personal
data protection, to refrain from deliberate relocation of remains from mass graves, to
avoid excavation and recovery efforts by untrained persons that result in the damage
or destruction of human remains, and to ensure that, in any exhumation or recovery
effort, data possibly leading to the identification of the deceased person is adequately
collected and recorded;
9. Urges parties to armed conflict to establish national information burea us
or other mechanisms, upon the outbreak of a conflict, to exchange information on
detainees and civilians belonging to an adverse party, to transmit such information to
that party, with the support of the Central Tracing Agency as a neutral intermediary,
where appropriate, and to open enquiries regarding these persons;
19-09430 3/4
S/RES/2474 (2019)
10. Reiterates its support for the efforts of the ICRC in seeking access to
information on persons reported missing and calls on all parties to armed conflict to
comply with their commitments in respect to such access and to cooperate with the
ICRC and its Central Tracing Agency in addressing the issue of missing persons,
consistent with applicable obligations under international humanitarian law;
11. Stresses the importance of strengthening the role and capacity of the
existing national, regional and international mechanisms that assist in addressing the
issue of missing persons as a result of armed conflict, to provide advice and support
to Member States, other national, international and regional organizations and
mechanisms in this field to provide training, to exchange, as appropriate, on
respective registries of missing persons cases, and to share best practices in close
cooperation with all relevant organisations;
12. Urges all parties to armed conflict to allow safe and unimpeded access of
humanitarian personnel, including those engaged in the search for and identification
of missing persons or their remains as soon as circumstances permit;
13. Calls upon all Member States to engage in networking, exchange of
experience, best practices and technical recommendations, and other means of
cooperation and coordination with state institutions, and, as appropriate, with national
commissions on missing persons, competent regional and international organizations
and mechanisms;
14. Underscores that accountability for missing persons as a result of armed
conflict can be among the components of the design and implementation of peace
negotiations and agreements and peacebuilding processes, including with reference
to justice and rule of law mechanisms;
15. Calls upon all parties to armed conflict, when negotiating and
implementing peace agreements, to include provisions to facilitate the search for
missing persons and to take all necessary steps to protect victims and witnesses
testifying on those reported missing in order to end impunity;
16. Underscores that the steps set out in this resolution can contribute to the
process of confidence building between parties to armed conflict, expedi ting peace
negotiations and settlement, transitional justice processes, reconciliation,
peacebuilding and sustaining peace;
17. Encourages Member States to increase their voluntary financial, technical
training and logistical assistance for states, upon their request, in support of
exhumation and identification processes relevant to the search for missing persons as
a result of armed conflict, in particular to advance forensic scientific and
methodological efforts for the recovery, identification and mana gement of bodies or
human remains in a way that respects human dignity;
18. Encourages the relevant United Nations Secretary-General’s special
representatives, envoys, coordinators and advisors to take into account, while
implementing their respective mandates, the issue of missing persons as a result of
armed conflict;
19. Requests the Secretary-General to include as a sub-item in the reports on
the protection of civilians the issue of missing persons as a result of armed conflict,
including measures undertaken by parties to armed conflict in the implementation of
the provisions of this resolution, and to brief the Security Council every twelve
months on the implementation of the resolution, within the annual briefing on the
protection of civilians.
4/4 19-09430