S/RES/2502(2019) SC
Security Council resolution 2502 (2019) [on extension of the mandate of the UN Organization Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (MONUSCO) until 20 Dec. 2020]
74
Session
15
Yes
0
No
0
Abstentions
| Draft symbol | S/2019/957 |
|---|---|
| Adopted symbol | S/RES/2502(2019) |
| Category | Peace and security |
| UN Document | S/RES/2502(2019) ↗ |
Vote Recorded Vote — S/PV.8692
Full text of resolution
United Nations S/RES/2502 (2019)
Security Council Distr.: General
19 December 2019
Resolution 2502 (2019)
Adopted by the Security Council at its 8692nd meeting, on
19 December 2019
The Security Council,
Recalling its previous resolutions and the statements of its President concerning
the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), especially its resolutions 2478 (2019),
2463 (2019), 2424 (2018), 2409 (2018), 2389 (2017), and previous resolutions
regarding the mandate of MONUSCO and the sanctions regime established by
resolutions 1493 (2003) and 1807 (2008),
Reaffirming the basic principles of peacekeeping, including consent of the
parties, impartiality, and non-use of force, except in self-defence and defence of the
mandate, and recognising that the mandate of each peace-keeping mission is specific
to the need and situation of the country concerned,
Reaffirming its strong commitment to the sovereignty, independence, unity and
territorial integrity of the DRC as well as all States in the region and emphasising the
need to respect fully the principles of non-interference, good-neighbourliness and
regional cooperation,
Recalling that the Government of the DRC bears the primary responsibility to
protect civilians within its territory and subject to its jurisdiction, including protection
from crimes against humanity and war crimes,
Noting that the DRC continues to suffer from recurring and evolving cycles of
conflict and persistent violence by foreign and domestic armed groups, which
exacerbate a deeply concerning security, human rights and humanitarian crisis, as well
as inter-communal and militia violence in areas of the DRC,
Recognising the efforts of the Government and the people of the DRC aiming at
the achievement of peace and national development, further recognising the efforts
of the Armed Forces of the DRC (FARDC) and the United Nations Organization
Stabilisation Mission in the DRC (MONUSCO) in addressing the threat posed by
armed groups in the DRC, encouraging the continuation of efforts by the Secretary-General of the United Nations, his special envoy for the Great Lakes, the African
Union (AU), the International Conference on the Great Lakes Region (ICGLR), the
Southern African Development Community (SADC) and signatory States of the Peace
and Security (PSC) Framework for the DRC and the region to restore peace and
security in the DRC, and encouraging the Government of the DRC to ensure
continuous close cooperation with these and other international parties,
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Recognising the importance of confidence-building, facilitation, mediation, and
community engagement to achieve peace and security in the DRC, and the need for
MONUSCO, as appropriate and when possible, to continue to explore how it can use
these techniques to enhance its ability to support the Mission ’s protection, its
information gathering and situational awareness, and to implement its mandated tasks,
including to protect civilians,
Reaffirming the important role of women and youth in the prevention and
resolution of conflicts, and in peacebuilding, stressing the importance of their full,
effective and meaningful participation in all efforts for the maintenance of and
promotion of peace and security in the DRC,
Expressing great concern over the humanitarian situation that has left at least
15.6 million Congolese in need of humanitarian assistance, further expressing deep
concern regarding the growing number of internally displaced persons in the DRC
with 5.01 million estimated to have been displaced as of December 2019, and the
538,000 refugees and 10.000 asylum seekers in the DRC, as well as the more than
865,000 refugees from the DRC in Africa as a result of ongoing hostilities, further
calling upon the DRC and all States in the region to work towards a peaceful
environment conducive to the realization of durable solutions for refugees and
internally displaced persons, including their eventual voluntary return and
reintegration in the DRC in conditions of safety and dignity, with the support of the
United Nations Country Team (UNCT), stressing that any such solution should be in
line with relevant obligations under international refugee law, international
humanitarian law and international human rights law, and commending United
Nations humanitarian agencies, partners, and donors for their efforts to provide urgent
and coordinated support to the population, calling on member States and other
international partners to scale up funding and contribute to the United Nations
humanitarian appeals for the DRC and the region to help ensure that United Nations
humanitarian agencies and other international organizations are fully funded and able
to urgently respond to the humanitarian needs in the country, including by addressing
the protection and assistance needs of internally displaced persons, all survivors of
sexual and gender-based violence, and other vulnerable communities,
Expressing grave concern about the current outbreak of the Ebola virus in the
DRC, which has affected more than 3,300 people and claimed the lives of more than
2,100 people to date, highlighting the urgency of the Ebola response and recalling its
PRST/2019/6 in that regards,
Recalling all its relevant resolutions on women, peace and security, on youth,
peace and security, on children and armed conflict, and on the protection of civilians
in armed conflict, welcoming efforts of the Government of the DRC in this regard,
further welcoming efforts by the Government of the DRC to implement resolution
1325 (2000), also recalling the conclusions on children and armed conflict in the DRC
(S/AC.51/2018/2) adopted on 7 August 2018 by the Security Council Working Group
on Children and Armed Conflict pertaining to the parties in armed conflicts of the
DRC, expressing grave concern over the high number of violations against children,
in particular sexual and gender-based violence being committed by security forces,
further calling on all actors to contribute to the rehabilitation and reintegration of
children formerly associated with armed groups and forces,
Welcoming the efforts of MONUSCO and international partners in delivering
training in human rights, international humanitarian law, gender mainstreaming, child
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protection and protection from sexual and gender-based violence to Congolese
security institutions and underlining their importance,
Recognising the adverse effects of climate change, ecological changes, natural
disasters, and lack of energy access, among other factors, on the stability of the DRC,
including through increasingly frequent and extreme weat her phenomena, flooding,
forest fires, erratic precipitation and food insecurity, welcoming the leadership of the
DRC in the development of national strategies to address these issues and in the
preservation of the Congo basin forest,
Commending the commitment of the Troops and Police Contributing Countries
(T/PCCs) in implementing the Mission’s mandate in a challenging environment,
highlighting the importance of effective command and control, respect for the chain
of command, adequate equipment and information in order for timely and effective
responses to attacks on civilians,
Reiterating its call on all parties to cooperate fully with MONUSCO and to
remain committed to the full and objective implementation of the Mission ’s mandate,
reiterating its condemnation of any and all attacks against peacekeepers, and
emphasising that those responsible for such attacks must be held accountable, and
encouraging all parties to work together to ensure that all peacekeepers in the field
are willing, capable and equipped to effectively and safely implement their mandate,
Welcoming the commitment of the Congolese authorities to closely collaborate
with MONUSCO and their support to a reconfiguration of the Mission,
Determining that the situation in the DRC continues to constitute a threat to
international peace and security in the region,
Acting under Chapter VII of the Charter of the United Nations,
Political situation
1. Welcomes the efforts of Government of the DRC to respond to the needs
of the Congolese people above the pursuit of partisan interests and encourages all
Congolese political stakeholders to put these needs above the pursuit of partisan
interests, reiterates the importance of delivering on President Tshisekedi and his
government’s commitments to pursue national unity, strengthen the rule of law and
respect for human rights, including the respect of freedom of opinion and expression,
freedom of the press and the right of peaceful assembly, fight against corruption,
launch domestic development programmes to significantly reduce poverty, and
further political inclusiveness and peacebuilding;
2. Welcomes the efforts of President Tshisekedi and his government towards
reconciliation and peace and stability in the DRC and to promote regional cooperation
and integration, notes that political stability and security as well as increased State
presence in areas of conflict are critical for the consolidation of the curre nt political
transition and sustainable peace in the DRC, calls upon the DRC authorities to work
towards the stabilisation and strengthening of the capacity of State institutions, with
the support of MONUSCO, in order to fulfil the rights and needs of all Congolese
people, further calls upon all political stakeholders to work toward a climate of peace,
transparency, inclusion and credibility during preparations for the holding of future
elections, including local elections in accordance with the Constitutio n and the
Electoral law, and to ensure the full, effective and meaningful participation of women
at all stages;
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3. Requests the Secretary-General and calls upon regional organisations to
provide political support to the strengthening of State institutions in the DRC and the
restoration of trust among the different parties, including through their good offices,
in order to consolidate peace and security, tackle the root causes of conflict in priority
areas, as well as foster a broad national consensus around key governance and security
reforms, the fight against illegal exploitations of natural resources, and support to
current reform and other electoral processes, in line with the government of DRC ’s
national priorities;
Human Rights
4. Welcomes the commitments and actions of President Tshisekedi towards
ensuring that the Government of the DRC protects and respects human rights and
fundamental freedoms, as well as to combat impunity in all areas, and calls upon the
government of the DRC to uphold these commitments;
5. Remains however deeply concerned by high levels of violations and abuses
of human rights and violations of international humanitarian law in parts of the
country, committed by all parties, as well as the persistently high level of v iolence
and the intensification of intercommunal violence fuelled by hate speech, and
recognises their deleterious effect on the stabilisation, community reconciliation,
reconstruction and development efforts in the DRC, recalls in that regard that it is
prepared to impose targeted sanctions under paragraph 7 (d) and (e) of its resolution
2293 (2016), regarding inter alia human rights violations or abuses or violations of
international humanitarian law;
6. Urges the Government of the DRC to hold accountable those responsible
for violations of international humanitarian law or violations and abuses of human
rights, as applicable, including those involving targeted attacks against civilians,
widespread sexual and gender-based violence, recruitment and use of children, the
forced displacement of significant numbers of civilians, extrajudicial executions and
arbitrary arrests, and in particular those that may amount to genocide, war crimes and
crimes against humanity, and stresses both regional cooperation and the DRC’s
cooperation with the International Criminal Court following the DRC ’s referral of the
situation in the DRC in 2004, as well as cooperation with the African Court of Human
and People’s Rights;
7. Welcomes the cooperation of the Government of the DRC with the team of
international experts on the situation in the Kasai regions mandated by the Human
Rights Council in its resolution 35/33, recognises the improvements in the
cooperation since President Tshisekedi’s election, requests the Government of the
DRC to implement all the recommendations made by the team of international experts
in its report, and to cooperate with the team of two international human rights experts,
charged with monitoring, evaluating, providing support and reporting on the
implementation by the DRC of those recommendations, further welcomes the
Government of the DRC’s continued cooperation with the United Nations team
deployed, as agreed, to assist the Congolese authorities investigations into the deaths
of the two UN experts in March 2017, and calls on them to ensure all perpetrators are
brought to justice and held accountable;
8. Welcomes the steps taken by President Tshisekedi and his government to
hold security forces accountable for violations of human rights and fight impunity
within their ranks, release political prisoners, and close irregular detention centres, as
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well as to investigate and prosecute violations of human rights by State agents, further
welcomes investigations by the Congolese authorities on any disproportionate use of
force by security forces on peaceful protesters and calls on the Congolese authorities
to ensure that those responsible for these acts are brought to justice, calls upon the
Government of the DRC to facilitate, in line with previous agreements, full and
unhindered access for the Joint Human Rights Office in the DRC (UNJHRO) to all
detention centres, hospitals and morgues and all other premises required for
documenting human rights violations, as applicable, stresses the need for the
Government of the DRC to continue to ensure the increased professionalism of its
security forces, including vetting, training and capacity building of security personnel
to fully respect domestic and international human rights law, as well as international
humanitarian law, and underlines the importance of observing the rule of law;
9. Strongly condemns sexual violence in conflict perpetrated by all parties in
the DRC, welcomes efforts made by the Government of the DRC to combat and prevent
sexual violence in conflict, including progress made in the fight against impunity
through the arrest, prosecution and conviction of perpetrators from the FARDC and the
PNC, and urges the Government of the DRC to continue to strengthen its efforts to
combat impunity for sexual violence in conflict, including sexual violence committed
by the FARDC and PNC at all levels, and to provide all necessary services and
protection to survivors, victims and witnesses, and further calls upon the Government
of the DRC to complete investigations into allegations of sexual exploitation and abuse
by members of the FARDC in line with the its zero-tolerance policy and, as appropriate,
to prosecute those responsible, further encourages the government to take all measures
to support the psychological and medical support of survivors of sexual violence in
conflict to facilitate their reintegration into their communities and to provide all
necessary services, including legal, and protection to survivors;
10. Encourages the Government of the DRC to implement in full its National
Strategy and the Roadmap agreed during the national conference in Kinshasa from
11–13 October 2016 to evaluate the implementation of the Joint Communiqué
between the Government of the DRC and the United Nations on the Fight Against
Sexual Violence in Conflict adopted in Kinshasa on 30 March 2013, and to ensure
adequate funding is allocated to the implementation of these commitments, and
recalls the importance of cooperation with the SRSG for sexual violence in conflicts;
11. Welcomes the progress made by the Government of the DRC to consolidate
the gains of the Action Plan to End and Prevent the Recruitment and Use of Children
and expedite its implementation, including aspects of the plan related to sexual
violence against children, and to take all necessary steps to end and prevent all
violations and abuses against children, and to ensure that children are not detained for
their alleged association with armed groups and are handed over to child protection
actors, in line with the Ministry of Defence and the National Intelligence Agency
Directives issued in 2013, and calls upon the Government of the DRC to continue its
efforts, in particular by prosecuting perpetrators within security forces for child
recruitment and use and by ensuring that perpetrators of all violations and abuses are
held accountable, and recalls the importance of cooperating with the SRSG for
children in armed conflicts;
Armed Groups
12. Strongly condemns all armed groups operating in the DRC and their
violations of international humanitarian law as well as other applicable internatio nal
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law, and abuses of human rights, reiterates its condemnation of the violence witnessed
in the DRC, especially those involving attacks on the civilian population, United
Nations and associated personnel and humanitarian actors, as well as medical person nel
and facilities, summary executions and maiming, sexual and gender-based violence and
recruitment and use of children, abductions of children and humanitarian personnel,
attacks on schools and hospitals in violation of applicable international law by ar med
groups and militias, the use of civilians as human shields, the forced displacement of
significant numbers of civilians, extrajudicial executions and arbitrary arrests, and
further reiterates that those responsible must be held accountable;
13. Demands that all armed groups cease immediately all forms of violence
and other destabilising activities, the illegal exploitation and trafficking of natural
resources, and further demands that their members immediately and permanently
disband, lay down their arms, reject violence, end and prevent violations perpetrated
against children and release children from their ranks, recalls in this regard that
recruitment and use of children in armed conflict in the DRC may lead to sanctions
under paragraph 7(d) of resolution 2293 (2016);
14. Notes that the elimination of the threat posed by armed groups requires an
integrated regional approach and strong political engagement by the governments of
DRC and the region to further seize on the positive regional momentum, in close
coordination with MONUSCO and the Special Envoy for the Great Lakes,
underscores that there can be no purely military solutions to these problems, calls
upon the Government of the DRC to appoint a senior coordinator to address
Disarmament, Demobilisation and Reintegration (DDR) and to establish a strategy
for DDR focused on returning ex-combatants to peaceful civilian life, including a
focus on the specific needs of female and male ex-combatants, welcomes the renewed
commitments of the DRC and its neighbours to work together to tackle insecurity in
Eastern DRC and to promote long lasting regional development, bearing in mind the
need to address the root causes of conflict, including the illicit explo itation and
trafficking of natural resources and put an end to recurring cycles of violence, as
outlined in the PSC Framework, reaffirms that the PSC Framework remains an
essential mechanism to achieve durable peace and stability in the DRC and the Region
recalls the commitments undertaken by the region under the PSC Framework not to
tolerate nor provide assistance or support of any kind to armed groups, urges the
signatory States, with the support of the PSC Framework Guarantors, to strengthen
their collaboration in addressing appropriately and holistically the threat of all
remaining foreign armed groups in the DRC and the illicit flow of weapons in the
region, fully supports the Special Envoy of the Secretary-General for the Great Lakes
in fulfilling his mandate to address the remaining challenges in implementation of the
PSC Framework and to promote peace and stability in the region, including through
good offices, coordinated strategies and shared information with MONUSCO,
UNOCA and other UN entities, and stresses the need for coordination and cooperation
between the Government of the DRC and other national authorities, United Nations
entities, civil society organisations and development actors to build and sustain peace,
stabilise, improve the security situation and assist in restoration of State authority;
15. Welcomes the repatriation of FDLR disarmed combatants and some former
M23 combatants, calls on the signatory States of the PSC Framework to complete
without precondition the repatriation of the remaining former M23 combatants, as
well as other combatants seeking voluntary return to their country of origin, within
the shortest time frame possible;
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16. Expresses concern at the illegal exploitation and trafficking of natural
resources, particularly timber, so-called “conflict minerals” like tin, tantalum,
tungsten and gold, as well as diamonds, cobalt, charcoal and wildlife, by armed
groups and criminal networks supporting them, the negative impact of armed conflict
on protected natural areas, which undermines lasting peace and development for the
DRC, and encourages the Government of the DRC to strengthen efforts to safeguard
those areas, calls on member States of ICGLR and regional economic communities
to jointly fight illegal exploitation and trade of natura l resources, and encourages
them to promote the transparent and lawful management of natural resources,
including the adoption of government revenue targets to finance development,
sustainable regulatory and customs frameworks, and responsible mineral sour cing
supply chain due diligence, and recalls in this regard its resolutions 2457 (2019) and
2389 (2017);
17. Notes that drivers behind different armed groups’ activities and militia
violence are varied, internal and external, and that there is no purely military solution
to these problems, underlines the need for tailored responses in addressing the threat
posed by armed groups, calls on the Government of the DRC to take further action in
this respect, combining military and non-military approaches in accordance with
international law, including international humanitarian law and international human
rights law, and including through tailored Disarmament, Demobilisation and
Reintegration (DDR) of ex-combatants into civilian life and local peacebuilding
initiatives which are sensitive to the needs and experiences of women and girls, in
coordination and with the support of MONUSCO in accordance with its manda te;
18. Calls for joint operations by the FARDC and MONUSCO, that include
joint planning and tactical cooperation, in accordance with MONUSCO ’s mandate
and the United Nations Human Rights Due Diligence Policy (HRDDP), to ensure all
efforts possible are being made to prevent, deter and stop armed groups and stresses
the need to carry out all operations, joint or unilateral, in strict compliance with
international law, including international humanitarian law and international human
rights law, as applicable;
19. Welcomes the expression of readiness by some armed groups to lay down
their weapons and, in that regard, calls upon the Government of the DRC and its
partners to urgently provide adequate and timely support for the DDR of eligible
former combatants, through tailored, community-based and context specific DDR
initiatives with sustainable economic alternatives and opportunities in order to
effectively attract combatants willing to demobilise and transition into a peaceful
civilian life, learning lessons from previous approaches, and ensuring that
accountability and the protection of children ’s rights is an integral part of those
processes, acknowledges that the absence of a credible DDR process adjusted to
current armed groups dynamics is preventing armed elements from laying down their
weapons;
20. Welcomes the preliminary commitments and actions taken by President
Tshisekedi and his government to advance security sector reform (SSR), promote the
consolidation of State authority, reconciliation, toleran ce and democracy, encourages
the Congolese authorities to swiftly implement the troop rotations announced by
President Tshisekedi, and calls on the Government of the DRC to remain fully
committed to protecting the civilian population through the swift esta blishment of
professional, accountable and sustainable security forces, the deployment of an
accountable Congolese civil administration, in particular the police, judiciary, prison
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and territorial administration, and the consolidation of rule of law and pr omotion and
protection of human rights, further calls upon the Government of the DRC to uphold
its national commitments to SSR, including by allocating the necessary financial
resources, and taking into account women’s full and effective participation and safety,
and notes with concern the limited progress in those fields essential for the DRC ’s
stabilisation to date;
21. Calls for continued national efforts to address the threat posed by the illicit
transfer, destabilising accumulation and misuse of small arms and light weapons,
including inter alia through ensuring the safe and effective management, storage and
security of their stockpiles of weapons and ammunition, with the continued support
of MONUSCO, as appropriate and within existing resources;
MONUSCO’s mandate
22. Decides to extend until 20 December 2020 the mandate of MONUSCO in
the DRC, including, on an exceptional basis and without creating a precedent or any
prejudice to the agreed principles of peacekeeping, its Intervention Brigade;
23. Decides that MONUSCO’s authorised troop ceiling will comprise 14,000
military personnel, 660 military observers and staff officers, 591 police personnel,
and 1,050 personnel of formed police units, further agrees to a temporary deployment
of an additional 360 personnel of formed police units provided they are deployed in
replacement of military personnel, as proposed by the Secretary-General in his report
S/2019/905, and invites the Secretariat to consider further reduction of MONUSCO ’s
level of military deployment and area of operations based on the positive evolution
of the situation on the ground, in particular in the regions where the threat posed by
armed groups is no longer significant;
24. Decides that the strategic priorities of MONUSCO are to contribute to the
following objectives:
(a) Protection of civilians, as described in paragraph 29(i) of this resolution;
(b) Support to the stabilisation and strengthening of State institutions in the
DRC and key governance and security reforms, as described in paragraph 29(ii) of
this resolution;
25. Stresses that MONUSCO’s mandate should be implemented based on a
prioritization of tasks established in paragraphs 29 to 39 of this resolution and, in this
regard, reaffirms that the protection of civilians must be given priority in decisions
about the use of available capacity and resources;
26. Urges MONUSCO to work with the Office of the Special Envoy for the
Great Lakes to seek political solutions to stop the cross-border flows of armed
combatants, arms and conflict minerals that threaten peace and stability in the DRC,
by aligning strategies and conducting information-sharing and coordinating their
respective reporting;
27. Authorises MONUSCO, in pursuit of its mandated tasks, to take all
necessary measures to carry out its mandate and requests the Secretary-General to
immediately inform the Security Council should MONUSCO fail to do so;
28. Requests MONUSCO to ensure that any support provided to operations
conducted by national security forces, including in the form of rations and fuel, should
be only for joint operations, jointly planned and executed, and subject to appropriate
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oversight and scrutiny, in strict compliance with the United Nations HRDDP, failing
which that support should be suspended;
29. Decides that the mandate of MONUSCO shall include the following
priority tasks, and that all MONUSCO ’s tasks should be implemented in a manner
consistent with respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms:
(i) Protection of civilians
(a) Take all necessary measures to ensure effective, timely, dynamic and
integrated protection of civilians under threat of physical violence within its provinces
of current deployment, with a specific focus on Eastern DRC whilst retaining a
capacity to intervene elsewhere in case of major deterioration of the situation, through
a comprehensive approach and in consultation with local communities, including by
preventing, deterring, and stopping all armed groups and local militias from inflicting
violence on the populations, by disarming them, and by supporting and undertaking
local mediation efforts to prevent escalation of violence, paying particular attention
to civilians gathered in displaced persons and refugee camps, peaceful demonstrators,
humanitarian personnel and human rights defenders, in line with the basic principles
of peacekeeping, while ensuring the risk to civilians are mitigated before, during and
after any military or police operation, including by tracking, preventing, minimising
and addressing civilian harm resulting from the mission’s operations, including when
in support of national security forces;
(b) Maintain a proactive deployment and a mobile, flexible and robust posture,
including by conducting active patrolling by foot and by vehicle, in particular in high
risk areas;
(c) Work with the Government of the DRC and humanitarian workers to
identify threats to civilians and implement joint prevention and response plans and
strengthen civil-military cooperation, to ensure the protection of civilians from abuses
and violations of human rights and violations of international humanitarian law,
including all forms of sexual and gender-based violence and violations and abuses
committed against children and persons with disabilities;
(d) Enhance its community engagement with civilians, including by the troops
and police, to raise awareness and understanding about its mandate and activities, to
strengthen its early warning mechanism, and to increase its efforts to monitor and
document violations of international humanitarian law and violations and abuses of
human rights, and continue and strengthen local community engagement and
empowerment, as well as strengthening protection of civilians through early warning
and response, including prevention, as appropriate, to lay out a strategy with the
government of the DRC containing concrete measures to build trust and
understanding among the population regarding MONUSCO’s efforts in the DRC and
to prevent disinformation campaigns aimed at undermining the mission’s credibility
and hindering its performance, and by ensuring mobility of the mission;
(e) in support of the authorities of the DRC, and on the basis of information
collection and analysis, carry out targeted offensive operations in the DRC t o
neutralise armed groups and contribute to the objective of reducing the threat posed
by armed groups to state authority and civilian security in the DRC and to make space
for stabilisation activities, either unilaterally or jointly with the FARDC, throug h an
expanded Intervention Brigade with enhanced effectiveness, as determined by the
Force Commander, with a view to enabling it to execute its mandate, that includes
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additional units with appropriate training, capabilities and equipment, which operates
with unity of command of the FIB under the FIB Headquarters, which falls under the
authority, command and control of MONUSCO Force Commander and with the
support of the whole of MONUSCO, in a robust, highly mobile and versatile manner
and in strict compliance with international law, including international humanitarian
law, and with the United Nations HRDDP and in accordance with the standing
operating procedures applicable to persons who are captured or who surrender, and
underlines that the entire MONUSCO force, including the Intervention Brigade, must
prioritise the implementation of its protection of civilians mandate;
(f) Work with the authorities of the DRC, leveraging the capacities and
expertise of the UN Police, MONUSCO justice and corrections capacities including
the UN Prosecution Support Cell, UNJHRO and other MONUSCO Justice
components, to strengthen and support the DRC judicial system in order to investigate
and prosecute all those allegedly responsible for genocide, war crimes and crimes
against humanity and violations of international humanitarian law and violations or
abuses of human rights in the country, including through cooperation with States of
the region and the ICC, following the decision made by the Prosecutor of the ICC in
June 2004 to open, following the request of the Government of the DRC, an
investigation into alleged crimes committed in the context of armed conflict in the
DRC since 2002;
(g) Provide good offices, advice and support to the Government of the DRC
to promote human rights, in particular civil and political rights, and to fight impunity,
including through the implementation of the Government’s “zero tolerance policy”
with respect to discipline and human rights and international humanitarian law
violations, committed by elements of the security sector, and to engage and facilitate
mediation efforts at local level to advance sustainable peace;
(ii) Support to stabilisation and the strengthening of State institutions in the DRC,
and key governance and security reforms, in order to establish functional,
professional, and accountable state institutions, including security and
judicial institutions,
Stabilisation
(a) Provide coordination between the Government of the DRC, international
partners and United Nations agencies in a targeted, sequenced and coordinated
approach to stabilisation informed by up to date conflict analysis, through the
implementation of the International Security and Stabilisation Support Strategy
(ISSSS) and adoption of a conflict-sensitive approach across the Mission;
(b) Provide technical advice to the Government of the DRC in the
consolidation of an effective national civilian structure that controls key mining
activities and manages in an equitable manner the extraction, transport, and trade of
natural resources in eastern DRC, in coordination with the Special Envoy for the Great
Lakes Region’s technical assistance efforts;
Root causes of conflict
(c) Provide good offices and technical support, in coordination with regional
and international partners, with a view to furthering reconciliation, democratisation
and inclusion, addressing the root causes of conflict and promoting intercommunal
reconciliation, including through political support and engagement with interlocutors
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across the political spectrum, including the Government, opposition parties, local
authorities, women and civil society;
(d) Provide good offices, advice and assistance to enable the Government of
the DRC to prevent, mitigate, and resolve intercommunal conflicts through, inter alia,
mediation and community engagement, by undertaking local dialogues on community
security, local conflict resolution, promotion of justice and reconciliation initiatives,
and to ensure actions against armed groups are supported by civilian and police
components as part of consolidated planning which provides a comprehensive
response to area-based stabilisation efforts;
(e) Monitor, report immediately to the Security Council, and follow-up on
human rights violations and abuses and violations of international humanitarian law
to report on restrictions on political space and violence, including in the context of
the elections, and support the United Nations system in-country to ensure that any
support provided by the United Nations shall be consistent with international
humanitarian law and human rights law and refugee law as applicable;
Security Sector Reform (SSR)
(f) Provide strategic and technical advice to the Government of the DRC and
play a leading role in coordinating the support provided by international and bilateral
partners and the United Nations system, in consultation with the Government of DRC,
to:
– accelerate national ownership of SSR by the Government of the DRC, including
through supporting the development of a common national plan, as well as a
clear and comprehensive SSR implementation roadmap including benchmarks
and timelines;
– encourage inclusive SSR which delivers security and justice to all through
independent, accountable and functioning justice and security institutions which
take into account women’s participation and safety, underlines in that regard
that progress in the fight against impunity is critical for the security forces to no
longer be perceived as a threat to civilians;
– promote and facilitate military, police, justice and prison sector reforms to
enhance the justice and security sector’s accountability and effectiveness; in that
regard, provide expertise, advice and training to the Congolese security forces
to strengthen their capacity, in particular through human rights training and
through continued implementation of the Integrated Operational Strategy for the
Fight Against Insecurity, developed by MONUSCO police, in compliance with
the United Nations HRDDP;
Disarmament, demobilisation, reintegration (DDR)
(g) Provide good offices, advice and assistance to the Government of the DRC,
in close cooperation with other international partners, for the DDR of Congolese and
foreign combatants not suspected of genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity
or abuses of human rights, into a peaceful civilian life that can be complemented by
a Community Violence Reduction (CVR) approach through community-based
security and stabilisation measures and a flexible disarmament and demobilisation
approach, coordinated under the framework of the ISSSS, while paying specific
attention to the needs of children formerly associated with armed fo rces and groups;
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(h) Coordinate with civil society, donor partners and government officials,
including local and provincial leaders, to support DDR efforts, especially regarding
reintegration into civilian life;
(i) Provide support to the disarmament, demobilisation, repatriation,
resettlement and reintegration (DDRRR) process to return and reintegrate foreign
combatants not suspected of genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity or abuses
of human rights and their dependants to a peaceful civilian life in their country of
origin, or a receptive third country while paying specific attention to the needs of
children formerly associated with armed forces and groups;
(j) Advise and support the DRC authorities in the disposal of weapons and
ammunitions of disarmed Congolese and foreign combatants in compliance with
resolution 2424 (2018) as well as applicable international arms control treaties,
including the Nairobi Protocol of which the DRC is signatory party and the Kinshasa
Convention;
(k) Continue to collaborate with the Government of the DRC to consolidate
the gains of the Action Plan to Prevent and End the Recruitment and Use of Children
and expedite its implementation, including on the aspects related to Sexual Violence
by the FARDC, and continue dialogue with all listed parties to obtain further
commitments and work towards the development and implementation of action plans
to prevent and end violations and abuses against children;
Protection of the United Nations
30. Ensure the protection of United Nations personnel, facilities, installations
and equipment and the security and freedom of movement of United Nations and
associated personnel;
Child protection
31. Requests MONUSCO to take fully into account child protection as a cross -
cutting issue throughout its mandate and to assist the Government of the DRC in
ensuring that the protection of children’s rights is taken into account, inter alia, in
DDR processes and in SSR as well as during interventions leading to the separation
of children from armed groups in order to end and prevent violations and abuses
against children, and acknowledges the crucial role of United Nations Child
Protection Advisers deployed as a standalone capacity in MONUSCO in that regard,
requests MONUSCO to continue to ensure the effectiveness of the monitoring and
reporting mechanisms on children and armed conflict;
Gender, Sexual Violence
32. Requests MONUSCO to take fully into account gender co nsiderations as
a crosscutting issue throughout its mandate and to assist the Government of the DRC
and other relevant stakeholders in creating a legal, political and socio -economic
environment conducive to ensuring the full, effective and meaningful parti cipation
and full involvement and representation of women at all levels, and survivors of
sexual and gender-based violence, for the maintenance and promotion of peace and
security, protection of civilians, including by engaging women ’s networks as partners
in protection, support to DDR and SSR efforts, and support to stabilisation efforts
through, inter alia, the provision of civilian and uniformed gender and women
protection advisers and focal points at headquarters and field levels, participation of
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women civil society leaders and organization members with regards to conflict
prevention and resolution, public institutions and decision -making, requests
MONUSCO support the government in advancing women’s political participation, in
particular achieving the 30% constitutional quota and further requests enhanced
reporting by MONUSCO to the Council on this issue;
33. Acknowledges the important role of United Nations Women Protection
Advisers deployed in MONUSCO in supporting the Government of the DRC to
implement its commitments on addressing sexual violence in conflict and calls on
MONUSCO to ensure they continue to work closely with the Government of the DRC
at both strategic and operational levels;
34. Reiterates the urgent and imperative need to hold accountable all
perpetrators of violations of international humanitarian law, requests MONUSCO to
accelerate the coordinated implementation of monitoring, analysis and reporting
arrangements on sexual violence in conflict;
Humanitarian Access
35. Recalls all its relevant resolutions on the protection of humanitarian and
medical personnel, including resolutions 2439 (2018) and 2286 (2016), and expresses
serious concern at increased attacks on humanitarian personnel and medical personnel
exclusively engaged in medical duties, as well as impediments to humanitarian access
in eastern DRC, including in particular those against humanitarian workers and
medical personnel responding to the Ebola outbreak, which risk jeopardising the
response, demands that all parties allow and facilitate the full, safe, immediate and
unhindered access of humanitarian personnel, equipment and supplies and the timely
delivery of humanitarian assistance to populations in need, in particular to internally
displaced persons, throughout the territory of the DRC, respecting the United Nations
guiding principles of humanitarian assistance, including humanity, impartiality,
neutrality and independence, and relevant provisions of international law;
36. Calls on MONUSCO to strengthen its collaboration with humanitarian
actors and streamline coordination mechanisms with humanitarian agencies to ensure
information sharing and an effective response, in line with their respective mandates,
to protection risks to the population;
37. Emphasises the importance of maintaining international support and
engagement – financially, technically and in-kind – to bring the Ebola outbreak
successfully to an end, requests all relevant parts of the United Nations System to
effectively coordinate their activities in response to the Ebola outbreak, and notes the
positive role of MONUSCO in that regard, recognises that Ebola is one of many
serious humanitarian and health challenges in Eastern DRC that need sustainable
solutions, including sustained strengthened healthcare systems to contain future
epidemics;
Sanctions regime
38. Requests MONUSCO to monitor the implementation of the arms embargo
as described in paragraph 1 of resolution 2293 (2016) in cooperation with the Group
of Experts established by resolution 1533 (2004), and in particular observe and report
on flows of military personnel, arms or related materiel across the eastern border of
the DRC, including by using, as specified in the letter of the Council dated 22 January
2013 (S/2013/44), surveillance capabilities provided by unmanned aerial systems,
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seize, collect, record and dispose of arms or related materiel brought into the DRC in
violation of the measures imposed by paragraph 1 of resolution 2293 (2016), and
exchange relevant information with the Group of Experts;
39. Expresses its full support to the United Nations Group of Experts
established by resolution 1533 (2004), calls for enhanced cooperation between all
States, particularly those in the region, MONUSCO and the Group of Experts,
encourages timely information exchange between MONUSCO and the Group of
Experts, further encourages all parties and all States to ensure cooperation with the
Group of Experts by individuals and entities within their jurisdiction or under their
control and reiterates its demand that all parties and all States ensure the safety of its
members and its support staff, and unhindered and immediate access, in particular to
persons, documents and sites the Group of Experts deems relevant to the execution of
its mandate;
Mission effectiveness
40. Recognises that the effective implementation of peacekeeping mandates is
the responsibility of all stakeholders and is contingent upon several critical factors,
including well-defined, realistic, and achievable mandates, political will, leadership,
performance and accountability at all levels, adequate resources, policy, planning, and
operational guidelines, and training and equipment;
41. Welcomes the initiatives undertaken by the Secretary-General to
standardise a culture of performance in UN peacekeeping, recalls its requests in
resolution 2378 (2017) and resolution 2436 (2018) that the Secretary-General ensure
that performance data related to the effectiveness of peacekeeping operations is used
to improve mission operations, including decisions such as those regarding
deployment, remediation, repatriation and incentives, and reaffirms its support for the
development of a comprehensive and integrated performance policy framework that
identifies clear standards of performance for evaluating all United Nations civilian
and uniformed personnel working in and supporting peacekeeping operations that
facilitates effective and full implementation of mandates, and includes comprehensive
and objective methodologies based on clear and well-defined benchmarks to ensure
accountability for underperformance and incentives and recognition for outstanding
performance, and calls on the United Nations to apply this framework to MONU SCO,
as described in resolution 2436 (2018), in particular by investigating and taking
immediate action following significant performance failures to implement the
protection of civilians strategy, to include the rotation, repatriation, replacement or
dismissal of the under-performing MONUSCO uniformed or civilian personnel,
including mission leadership and mission support personnel, consistent with
resolution 2436 (2018), notes the efforts of the Secretary-General to develop a
comprehensive performance assessment system and requests the Secretary-General
and the troop- and police-contributing countries to seek to increase the number of
women in MONUSCO, as well as to ensure the full, effective and meaningful
participation of women in all aspects of operations;
42. Underlines the need to further improve the effectiveness of the Force
Intervention Brigade to ensure effective, timely, dynamic and integrated protection of
civilians and the neutralisation of armed groups by, inter alia, completing
implementation of past assessments to reinvigorate the Intervention Brigade ’s
operational effectiveness, attaching additional staff officers, as deemed appropriate
by MONUSCO Force Headquarters, and undertaking the action set out in paragraph
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29(i)(e) of this resolution, welcomes in this regard the Secretary-General’s decision
to send an evaluation mission to assess the ability of MONUSCO ’s Force to
effectively deliver on its protection of civilians mandate, identity operational
deficiencies and gaps and make practical recommendations on how to improve the
Force’s performance in these domains, and looks forward to its results;
43. Requests the Secretary-General to take all possible steps, including
through the full use of existing authorities and at his discretion, to maximise
MONUSCO’s operational capacity and ability to discharge its mandate, with a
specific focus on priority areas, including through enhancing MONUSCO ’s
personnel, mobility assets and capabilities for gathering timely, reliable and
actionable information on threats to civilians, especially the linkages between armed
groups and local communities, while continuing to strengthen the performance of the
Mission;
44. Requests MONUSCO to consider the environmental impacts of its
operations when fulfilling its mandated tasks and, in this context, to manage them as
appropriate and in accordance with applicable and relevant General Assembly
resolutions and United Nations rules and regulations;
45. Requests the Secretary-General to continue to implement a zero-tolerance
policy on serious misconduct, sexual exploitation and abuse, sexual harassment,
fraud, corruption, trafficking in natural resources or wildlif e, including by making full
use of the existing authority of the SRSG to ensure accountability of the Mission ’s
staff and through effective mission support arrangement, recalls its presidential
statement S/PRST/2015/22 and its resolution 2272 (2016), welcomes the commitment
of the Secretary-General to enforce strictly his zero-tolerance policy on sexual
exploitation and abuse (SEA), further requests the Secretary-General to take all
necessary measures to ensure full compliance of all personnel in MONUSCO, civilian
and uniformed, including mission leadership and mission support personnel, with the
United Nations zero-tolerance policy on sexual exploitation and abuse and to keep
the Council fully informed through his reports to the Council about the Mission ’s
progress in this regard, stresses the need to prevent such exploitation and abuse and
to improve how these allegations are addressed in line with resoluti on 2272 (2016),
and urges T/PCCs to continue taking appropriate preventative action including vetting
of all personnel, predeployment and in-mission awareness training, and to ensure full
accountability in cases of such conduct involving their personnel, including through
timely investigation of allegations by T/PCCs and MONUSCO, and to take
appropriate steps to investigate allegations of sexual exploitation and abuse, hold
perpetrators accountable and repatriate units when there is credible evidence of
widespread or systemic sexual exploitation and abuse or other serious misconduct by
those units;
Exit strategy
46. Takes note of the independent strategic review and the conditions it
highlights for a successful, gradual transition and a responsible exit of MONUSCO,
in particular the importance of meaningful action by the people and Government of
the DRC to address the drivers of instability and violence, the need for a whole -ofgovernment transformative strategy to lay the foundations for durable peace and
inclusive development and the importance of tangible regional cooperation initiatives,
further notes the assessment made by the review that an absolute minimum transition
period of three years is required, that the achievement of this timeline would require
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the implementation of the Government of the DRC ’s announced reforms to address
the structural drivers of conflict, and that this tentative timeline would have to remain
flexible and to take into account the security situation based on ongoing assessments,
as well as the red lines set out in the review justifying a pause in the transition;
47. Stresses that MONUSCO’s activities should be conducted in such a
manner as to facilitate progress towards sustainable and inclusive peace and
development and address the root causes of conflict, to reduce the threat posed by
domestic and foreign armed groups to a level that can be managed by the DRC ’s
security forces and enables MONUSCO’s exit based on the improvement of the
situation on the ground, with a particular focus on reduction of the threat to civilians;
48. Underscores the need to progressively transfer MONUSCO’s tasks to the
Government of the DRC, the UNCT and other relevant stakeholders in order to enab le
the responsible and sustainable exit of MONUSCO, in this regard emphasises the need
for joint analysis and effective strategic planning with the Government of the DRC,
the UNCT, humanitarian actors and other partners, and recognises the important role
of strategic planning officers and field-level coordinators in supporting these efforts,
requests the Secretary-General to proceed with the gradual transfer of MONUSCO ’s
programmatic activities to the relevant partners based on such analysis and planning;
49. Stresses the importance of a comprehensive dialogue between the
government of the DRC and MONUSCO on the progress of the political and security
reform agenda, also with a view towards transition, and in that regards further
requests the Secretary-General to engage with the Government of the DRC to
articulate a joint strategy and identify a set of measurable benchmarks, to be proposed
to the Security Council no later than 20 October 2020, that would allow for a
progressive transfer of MONUSCO’s tasks to the Congolese authorities, UNCT and
other stakeholders, and a further reduction of MONUSCO ’s level of deployment and
area of operations by focusing its military presence in the regions most affected by
persistent high levels of insecurity and shifting towards a UN police and civilian
presence in more stable regions;
50. Recalls the commitments made by the Government of the DRC,
encourages the government to swiftly address the following key issues in order to
make the support and technical assistance of MONUSCO and oth er partners more
efficient, not precluding other priorities jointly identified between the government of
the DRC and MONUSCO ahead of the elaboration of the joint strategy as outlined
above:
(a) Appoint, empower, and resource a senior coordinator to lead DRC
government efforts on disarmament, demobilisation, and reintegration (DDR)
programs and a DDR strategy to transition eligible former combatants into peaceful
civilian life;
(b) Initiate disciplinary and judicial procedures, in accordance with the DRC
legislation, against DRC officials who have been found to have engaged in corruption,
ordered violence against civilians or engaged in commercial relations with armed
groups;
(c) Initiate appropriate disciplinary and judicial procedures against
individuals responsible for human rights violations and abuses, including crimes
against children and sexual and gender-based violence, and work towards eliminating
human rights violations committed by Congolese security forces;
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(d) Conduct information-sharing with regional security forces to interdict
cross-border flows of arms, combatants, and conflict minerals;
Reports by the Secretary-General
51. Requests the Secretary-General to report to the Council every three months
on the situation in the DRC, including progress towards the strengthening of State
institutions, key governance and security reforms, and on the implementation of
MONUSCO’s mandate, including its protection of civilian tasks, as per the
requirements set out in paragraph 46 of resolution 2463 (2019), as well as on progress
made towards the progressive transfer of tasks to the Government of the DRC, the
UNCT and other relevant stakeholders, cooperation among regional security forces,
and information on police and force generation and the implementation of the
measures taken to improve MONUSCO’s performance, including to ensure force
effectiveness as outlined in paragraphs 40 to 45, further requests the Secretary-General to include gender analysis in all reports to the Security Council;
52. Requests the Secretary-General to report to the Security Council every six
months, in coordination with the Secretary-General’s Special Envoy for the Great
Lakes Region and the SRSG for the DRC on the implementation of the commitments
under the PSC Framework and its linkages with the broader security situation in the
Great Lakes Region;
53. Decides to remain actively seized of the matter.
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