S/RES/2543(2020) SC
Security Council resolution 2543 (2020) [on extension of the mandate of the UN Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) until 17 Sept. 2021]
75
Session
15
Yes
0
No
0
Abstentions
| Draft symbol | S/2020/903 |
|---|---|
| Adopted symbol | S/RES/2543(2020) |
| Category | POLITICAL AND LEGAL QUESTIONS |
| Sponsors (1) |
Germany and Indonesia
|
| P5 Positions |
|
| UN Document | S/RES/2543(2020) ↗ |
Vote Recorded Vote — S/PV.8759
Speeches following this vote (11)
At the outset, we would like to welcome the start of the Afghanistan peace negotiations in Doha last Saturday. It is a major achievement, which we have all been awaiting for many years. We would like to thank and congratulate all
sides involved, especially our Qatari friends for their facilitation of the first round of negotiations.
Now that the peace negotiations have started, it is indeed in …
After hearing the statement made by my dear brother Christoph Heusgen, it seems that we are already leaving the Council.
But on a more serious note, I would also like to echo my fellow co-penholder, Christoph from Germany, as Indonesia expresses its sincere appreciation to all members of the Council for their support on resolution 2543 (2020), on the renewal of the mandate of the United Nations …
The President
I wish to say to the representatives of Indonesia and Germany that sometimes it is when there is a stoppage in play that the best goals are scored.
The United States commends the penholders for the cooperative spirit in which they led this process and specifically both the Ambassadors for their personal commitment and their teams’ personal commitment to the future of Afghanistan. We thank them both.
The United States remains deeply committed to Afghanistan and to Special Representative of the Secretary-General Lyons’ work and leadership at …
France welcomes the unanimous adoption of resolution 2543 (2020), which renews the mandate of the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) and would like to thank Germany and Indonesia for the efforts they made in their capacity as co-authors of the resolution. The resolution sends a strong signal as the peace talks begin.
First, the peace process can be sustainably successful on…
Estonia welcomes the adoption of the resolution on the renewal of the mandate of the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA). We thank co-penholders Germany and Indonesia for their hard and efficient work. We believe that resolution 2543 (2020) is well balanced and highlights the Council’s priorities and the most important aspects of UNAMA’s present and future activities.
We wel…
The Security Council has unanimously adopted resolution 2543 (2020), renewing the mandate of the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA), which China very much welcomes. As Afghanistan’s close neighbour, China supports UNAMA in carrying out its mandated work and sincerely hopes that the war and violence in Afghanistan will come to an end and the country will soon achieve developm…
Belgium welcomes the unanimous adoption of resolution 2543 (2020), on the situation in Afghanistan. We commend the penholders and all members of the Council for the close collaboration that led to this result. Today’s resolution sends a strong and important signal of the commitment of the Council to all parties in Afghanistan at a critical time, given the start of intra-Afghan negotiations last w…
The Dominican Republic welcomes the adoption of resolution 2543 (2020) because it is a balanced text that effectively supports the work of the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA). We commend the penholders for their excellent work throughout the negotiation process.
At a time when intra-Afghan talks have begun and efforts for lasting peace in Afghanistan look promising, it i…
We welcome the unanimous adoption of resolution 2543 (2020). We thank Indonesia and Germany, as well as Qatar for facilitating the peace process. We hope that this is the beginning of a phase of stability and prosperity for Afghanistan. We also hope that the role of women and the protection of children will be enhanced, and that these will lead to our desired goals.
Afghanistan extends its appreciation to the Security Council for the adoption today of resolution 2543 (2020), extending the mandate of United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) for another 12 months. The unanimous adoption of the resolution sends a very clear, strong and unequivocal message of the Council’s support for Afghanistan at one of the most critical times in our contempor…
Draft resolution text UNBench dataset (Liang et al.) ↗
The Security Council,
Recalling its previous resolutions on Afghanistan, in particular its resolution 2489 (2019) extending through 17 September 2020 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, while also addressing the challenges facing the country and its people, especially consequences of the COVID -19 pandemic, recognizing that the impact of the pandemic presents a profound challenge to Afghanistan’s health system, socio-economic and humanitarian situations, and is worsening the food crisis and acknowledging the launch of the Global Humanitarian Response Plan for COVID-19 by the United Nations, which puts the people at the center of the response, as well as recognizing the efforts and measures taken by the Government of Afghanistan in response to COVID-19,
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,
Recognizing that a sustainable peace can be achieved only through a comprehensive and inclusive Afghan-led and Afghan-owned political process that aims at a permanent and comprehensive ceasefire as well as an inclusive political settlement to end the conflict in Afghanistan and reaffirming the importance of the United Nations in this regard, as well as welcoming the efforts of all regional and international partners of Afghanistan and recognizing the efforts of the Government of Afghanistan and of all other Afghan actors in facilitating intra -Afghan negotiations,
Calling for an inclusive and meaningful peace process with the participation of women, youth and ethnic, religious and other minorities and underlining that the economic, social, political and development gains made in the last 19 years as well as respect for human rights, especially for women, children and minorities, must be protected and built upon,
Recalling the desire of the Government and the people of Afghanistan to reinvigorate their country’s standing as a platform of international cooperation, and in this regard welcoming the efforts of regional and international partners and organizations in advancing sustainable development, regional connectivity, and reconstruction, which is vital to ensuring stability and economic prosperity in Afghanistan.
Welcoming the international community’s continued support for a peaceful,
secure, stable and prosperous Afghanistan and expecting a renewal of strategic
consensus and commitment between the international community and the
Government of Afghanistan in the forthcoming Afghanistan Donors’ Conference in
Geneva,
Expressing its deep concern about the continuing high level of violence and the
security situation in Afghanistan, especially the number of civilian casualties, and
stressing the importance of sustained efforts to reduce violence,
Further expressing its deep concern about the threat posed by terrorism to
Afghanistan and the region, expressing serious concern over the continuing presence
of Al-Qaida, ISIL as well as other international terrorist organizations and their
affiliated groups in Afghanistan, condemning in the strongest terms all terrorist
activity and all terrorist attacks, and reaffirming the importance of ensuring that the
territory of Afghanistan should not be used by Al-Qaida, ISIL or other international
terrorist groups to threaten or attack any other country, and that neither the Taliban
nor any other Afghan group or individual should support terrorists operating on the
territory of any country,
Emphasizing the importance of supporting the Government of Afghanistan in
capacity building, in particular of the Afghan National Defence and Security Forces
(ANDSF) including the Afghan National Police (ANP) in securing their country and
in their fight against terrorism,
Expressing concern over the cultivation, production, trade and trafficking of
illicit drugs in Afghanistan which continue to pose a threat to peace and stability in
the region and beyond, calling upon states to strengthen international and regional
cooperation to counter this threat and recognizing the important role of the United
Nations Office on Drugs and Crime in this context,
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 and UNAMA with the Committee, including its Analytical Support and
Sanctions Monitoring Team,
1. Welcomes the report of the Secretary-General of 18 August 2020
(S/2020/809);
2. Expresses its appreciation for the United Nations’ long-term commitment
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. Welcomes UNAMA’s ongoing efforts in the implementation of the
mandated tasks, priorities and related resources of UNAMA especially during the
COVID-19 pandemic, and calls for the implementation of the recommendations of
the Secretary-General’s call for a global ceasefire as supported in resolution 2532
(2020);
4. Welcomes the start of intra-Afghan negotiations in Doha, Qatar on
12 September 2020, strongly encourages parties to the negotiations to continue
pursuing confidence-building measures including additional reductions in violence,
further encourages parties to the negotiations to engage in good faith with the aim of
a permanent and comprehensive ceasefire and an inclusive political settlement to end
the conflict in Afghanistan, and emphasizes the importance of the implementation of
resolution 2513 (2020);
5. Decides to extend until 17 September 2021 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), 2344 (2017), 2405 (2018), 2460 (2019), 2489 (2019);
6. 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 relevant international communiqués, with a particular focus on the priorities laid out below:
(a) 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, particularly in view of intra-Afghan negotiations started in Doha on 12 September 2020, proposing and supporting confidence-building measures within the 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 resolutions 1267 (1999), 1988 (2011) and its other relevant resolutions;
(b) support, in close consultation and coordination with the Government of Afghanistan, the organization of future timely, credible, transparent, and inclusive Afghan elections, work closely with the election management bodies, supporting them to deliver a robust and transparent results management process, coordinate international community efforts and strengthen, in support of the Government of Afghanistan’s electoral reform efforts, the sustainability, integrity and inclusiveness of the electoral process, as well as increase efforts to provide capacity -building and technical assistance to the election management bodies and other relevant Afghan institutions involved in this process;
(c) promote, as co-chair of the Joint Coordination and Monitoring Board (JCMB), coherent support by the international community to the development and governance priorities of the Government of Afghanistan, 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, at the same time, coordinate international partners for follow-up, in particular through information sharing, and support efforts to increase accountability, transparency, and effectiveness of aid use, including cost-effectiveness, in line with the commitments made at the Geneva Conference in 2018 and to be reviewed at the forthcoming Afghanistan Donors’ Conference in Geneva;
(d) support regional cooperation, with a view to promoting stability and peace, as well as assisting Afghanistan in utilizing its role at the heart of Asia to promote regional cooperation and connectivity, and to work towards a prosperous Afghanistan, building on the achievements made, to promote partnership on connectivity, based on transparency, openness, and inclusiveness, welcome joint efforts to enhance dialogue and collaboration and to advance shared goals of economic development across the region;
(e) continue, with the support of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), to cooperate with and strengthen the capacity of the Government of Afghanistan, the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission (AIHRC), and civil society in the protection and promotion of human rights, to cooperate also with the Government of Afghanistan 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, and the treatment of those deprived of their liberty, to promote accountability, and advise, in close consultation with the Government of Afghanistan, stakeholders on the establishment and implementation of judicial and non -judicial processes to address the legacy of large-scale human rights violations and abuses as well as international crimes and to prevent their recurrence 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) support in this regard the importance of gender equality and women’s and girls’ empowerment, education, human rights, and the full, safe, equal, effective and meaningful participation, engagement and leadership of women in all levels of decision-making, including in peace talks, overall peacebuilding strategies, at the national and subnational level, call on the Government of Afghanistan and the international community to fully implement and finance the 1325 National Action Plan and to ensure the protection of civilians, especially women, children, displaced persons, and minorities, including from sexual- and gender-based violence, and that perpetrators of such violence and abuse are held accountable;
(g) strengthen capacity to report on violations and abuses against children, and to support efforts to strengthen the protection of children affected by armed conflict, including through engagement with all parties to the conflict to undertake specific commitments and measures to end and prevent violations and abuses against children and sustained dialogue with the Government of Afghanistan on the swift and full implementation of the Action Plan and Road Map to End and Prevent Child Recruitment;
(h) support the efforts of the Government of Afghanistan in fulfilling its commitments to improve governance and the rule of law, including transitional justice as an essential component of the ongoing peace process, budget execution and the fight against corruption throughout the country;
(i) coordinate and facilitate the delivery of humanitarian assistance efforts and work towards improving the accessibility of humanitarian assistance, in support of Afghans in need and consistent with humanitarian principles, including by providing effective support as appropriate to national and local authorities in assisting and protecting internally displaced persons and to creating conditions conducive to a voluntary, safe, dignified and sustainable return of internally displaced persons and refugee populations to one’s home or local integration or resettlement, with a particular focus on durable development solutions to these issues;
(j) promote, through an appropriate UNAMA presence and in support of the efforts of the Government of Afghanistan, enhanced cooperation with the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC);
(k) closely coordinate and cooperate, where relevant, with the non-combat Resolute Support Mission agreed upon between NATO and the Government of Afghanistan, as well as with the NATO Senior Civilian Representative;
7. Stresses the critical importance of a continued and appropriate presence of UNAMA and other United Nations Agencies, Funds and Programmes in the provinces, based on a “One UN” approach and in close consultation and coordination with and in support of the priorities of the Government of Afghanistan;
8. 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 with a view to
maximizing their collective effectiveness in full alignment with the reform agenda of the Government of Afghanistan, and to continuing to lead international civilian efforts in full cooperation with the Government of Afghanistan aimed at reinforcing the role of Afghan institutions to perform their responsibilities;
9. 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, notes that UNAMA staff are deployed in deteriorating and complex security and health environments and stresses the importance of measures to ensure the safety, security and health support of the mission;
10. Requests that the Secretary-General reports to the Council every three months on developments in Afghanistan including the security situation, 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 subnational level, and priorities as set out in this resolution;
11. Decides to remain actively seized of the matter.
Full text of resolution
United Nations S/RES/2543 (2020)
Security Council Distr.: General
15 September 2020
Resolution 2543 (2020)
Adopted by the Security Council at its 8759th meeting, on
15 September 2020
The Security Council,
Recalling its previous resolutions on Afghanistan, in particular its resolution
2489 (2019) extending through 17 September 2020 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, while also addressing the challenges
facing the country and its people, especially consequences of the COVID -19
pandemic, recognizing that the impact of the pandemic presents a profound challenge
to Afghanistan’s health system, socio-economic and humanitarian situations, and is
worsening the food crisis and acknowledging the launch of the Global Humanitarian
Response Plan for COVID-19 by the United Nations, which puts the people at the
center of the response, as well as recognizing the efforts and measures taken by the
Government of Afghanistan in response to COVID-19,
Reaffirming its strong commitment to the sovereignty, independence, ter ritorial
integrity and national unity of Afghanistan, as well as its continued support for the
Government and people of Afghanistan,
Recognizing that a sustainable peace can be achieved only through a
comprehensive and inclusive Afghan-led and Afghan-owned political process that
aims at a permanent and comprehensive ceasefire as well as an inclusive political
settlement to end the conflict in Afghanistan and reaffirming the importance of the
United Nations in this regard, as well as welcoming the efforts of all regional and
international partners of Afghanistan and recognizing the efforts of the Government
of Afghanistan and of all other Afghan actors in facilitating intra -Afghan
negotiations,
Calling for an inclusive and meaningful peace process with the participation of
women, youth and ethnic, religious and other minorities and underlining that the
economic, social, political and development gains made in the last 19 years as well
as respect for human rights, especially for women, children and minorities , must be
protected and built upon,
Recalling the desire of the Government and the people of Afghanistan to
reinvigorate their country’s standing as a platform of international cooperation, and
in this regard welcoming the efforts of regional and international partners and
20-11956 (E)
*2011956*
S/RES/2543 (2020)
organizations in advancing sustainable development, regional connectivity, and
reconstruction, which is vital to ensuring stability and economic prosperity in
Afghanistan,
Welcoming the international community’s continued support for a peaceful,
secure, stable and prosperous Afghanistan and expecting a renewal of strategic
consensus and commitment between the international community and the
Government of Afghanistan in the forthcoming Afghanistan Donors’ Conference in
Geneva,
Expressing its deep concern about the continuing high level of violence and the
security situation in Afghanistan, especially the number of civilian casualties, and
stressing the importance of sustained efforts to reduce violence,
Further expressing its deep concern about the threat posed by terrorism to
Afghanistan and the region, expressing serious concern over the continuing presence
of Al-Qaida, ISIL as well as other international terrorist organizations and t heir
affiliated groups in Afghanistan, condemning in the strongest terms all terrorist
activity and all terrorist attacks, and reaffirming the importance of ensuring that the
territory of Afghanistan should not be used by Al-Qaida, ISIL or other international
terrorist groups to threaten or attack any other country, and that neither the Taliban
nor any other Afghan group or individual should support terrorists operating on the
territory of any country,
Emphasizing the importance of supporting the Government of Afghanistan in
capacity building, in particular of the Afghan National Defence and Security Forces
(ANDSF) including the Afghan National Police (ANP) in securing their country and
in their fight against terrorism,
Expressing concern over the cultivation, production, trade and trafficking of
illicit drugs in Afghanistan which continue to pose a threat to peace and stability in
the region and beyond, calling upon states to strengthen international and regional
cooperation to counter this threat and recognizing the important role of the United
Nations Office on Drugs and Crime in this context,
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 and UNAMA with the Committee, including its Analytical Support and
Sanctions Monitoring Team,
1. Welcomes the report of the Secretary-General of 18 August 2020
(S/2020/809);
2. Expresses its appreciation for the United Nations’ long-term commitment
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. Welcomes UNAMA’s ongoing efforts in the implementation of the
mandated tasks, priorities and related resources of UNAMA especially during the
COVID-19 pandemic, and calls for the implementation of the recommendations of
the Secretary-General’s call for a global ceasefire as supported in resolution
2532 (2020);
4. Welcomes the start of intra-Afghan negotiations in Doha, Qatar on
12 September 2020, strongly encourages parties to the negotiations to continue
pursuing confidence-building measures including additional reductions in violence,
further encourages parties to the negotiations to engage in good faith with the aim of
a permanent and comprehensive ceasefire and an inclusive political settlement to end
2/5 20-11956
S/RES/2543 (2020)
the conflict in Afghanistan, and emphasizes the importance of the implementation of
resolution 2513 (2020);
5. Decides to extend until 17 September 2021 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), 2344 (2017), 2405 (2018), 2460 (2019), 2489 (2019);
6. 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 Gover nment of Afghanistan
and in accordance with the relevant international communiqués, with a particular
focus on the priorities laid out below:
(a) 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, particularly in view of intra-Afghan negotiations
started in Doha on 12 September 2020, proposing and supporting confidence -building
measures within the 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 resolutions 1267 (1999), 1988 (2011) and its other relevant
resolutions;
(b) support, in close consultation and coordination with the Government of
Afghanistan, the organization of future timely, credible, transparent, and inclusive
Afghan elections, work closely with the election management bodies, supporting
them to deliver a robust and transparent results management process, coordinate
international community efforts and strengthen, in support of the Government of
Afghanistan’s electoral reform efforts, the sustainability, integrity and inclusiveness
of the electoral process, as well as increase efforts to provide capacity -building and
technical assistance to the election management bodies and other relevant Afghan
institutions involved in this process;
(c) promote, as co-chair of the Joint Coordination and Monitoring Board
(JCMB), coherent support by the international community to the development and
governance priorities of the Government of Afghanistan, 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, at the same
time, coordinate international partners for follow -up, in particular through
information sharing, and support efforts to increase accountability, transparency, and
effectiveness of aid use, including cost-effectiveness, in line with the commitments
made at the Geneva Conference in 2018 and to be reviewed at the forth coming
Afghanistan Donors’ Conference in Geneva;
(d) support regional cooperation, with a view to promoting stability and peace,
as well as assisting Afghanistan in utilizing its role at the heart of Asia to promote
regional cooperation and connectivity, and to work towards a prosperous Afghanistan,
building on the achievements made, to promote partnership on connectivity, based on
transparency, openness, and inclusiveness, welcome joint efforts to enhance dialogue
and collaboration and to advance shared goals of economic development across the
region;
(e) continue, with the support of the Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), to cooperate with and strengthen the
capacity of the Government of Afghanistan, the Afghanistan Independent Human
Rights Commission (AIHRC), and civil society in the protection and promotion of
20-11956 3/5
S/RES/2543 (2020)
human rights, to cooperate also with the Government of Afghanistan 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, and the treatment of those deprived of their liberty, to promote
accountability, and advise, in close consultation with the Government of Afghanistan,
stakeholders on the establishment and implementation of judicial and non -judicial
processes to address the legacy of large-scale human rights violations and abuses as
well as international crimes and to prevent their recurrence 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) support in this regard the importance of gender equality and women’s and
girls’ empowerment, education, human rights, and the full, safe, equal, effective and
meaningful participation, engagement and leadership of women in all levels of
decision-making, including in peace talks, overall peacebuilding strategies, at the
national and subnational level, call on the Government of Afghanistan and the
international community to fully implement and finance the 1325 National Action
Plan and to ensure the protection of civilians, especially women, children, displaced
persons, and minorities, including from sexual- and gender-based violence, and that
perpetrators of such violence and abuse are held accountable;
(g) strengthen capacity to report on violations and abuses against children, and
to support efforts to strengthen the protection of children affected by armed conflict,
including through engagement with all parties to the conflic t to undertake specific
commitments and measures to end and prevent violations and abuses against children
and sustained dialogue with the Government of Afghanistan on the swift and full
implementation of the Action Plan and Road Map to End and Prevent Chi ld
Recruitment;
(h) support the efforts of the Government of Afghanistan in fulfilling its
commitments to improve governance and the rule of law, including transitional justice
as an essential component of the ongoing peace process, budget execution and t he
fight against corruption throughout the country;
(i) coordinate and facilitate the delivery of humanitarian assistance efforts
and work towards improving the accessibility of humanitarian assistance, in support
of Afghans in need and consistent with humanitarian principles, including by
providing effective support as appropriate to national and local authorities in assisting
and protecting internally displaced persons and to creating conditions conducive to a
voluntary, safe, dignified and sustainable return of internally displaced persons and
refugee populations to one’s home or local integration or resettlement, with a
particular focus on durable development solutions to these issues;
(j) promote, through an appropriate UNAMA presence and in support o f the
efforts of the Government of Afghanistan, enhanced cooperation with the United
Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC);
(k) closely coordinate and cooperate, where relevant, with the non -combat
Resolute Support Mission agreed upon between NATO and the Government of
Afghanistan, as well as with the NATO Senior Civilian Representative;
7. Stresses the critical importance of a continued and appropriate presence of
UNAMA and other United Nations Agencies, Funds and Programmes in the
provinces, based on a “One UN” approach and in close consultation and coordination
with and in support of the priorities of the Government of Afghanistan;
4/5 20-11956
S/RES/2543 (2020)
8. 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 with a view to
maximizing their collective effectiveness in full alignment with the reform agenda of
the Government of Afghanistan, and to continuing to lead international civilian efforts
in full cooperation with the Government of Afghanistan aimed at reinforcing the role
of Afghan institutions to perform their responsibilities;
9. 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, notes that UNAMA staff are deployed in deteriorating and complex security
and health environments and stresses the importance of measures to ensure the safety,
security and health support of the mission;
10. Requests that the Secretary-General reports to the Council every three
months on developments in Afghanistan including the security situation, 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 subnational level, and priorities as set out in this resolution;
11. Decides to remain actively seized of the matter.
20-11956 5/5
This resolution cites
- S/RES/1267(1999)
- 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/2041(2012)
- S/RES/2096 (2013)
- S/RES/2145 (2014)
- S/RES/2210 (2015)
- S/RES/2274 (2016)
- S/RES/2344 (2017)
- S/RES/2405 (2018)
- S/RES/2460 (2019)
- S/RES/2489 (2019)
- S/RES/2513 (2020)
Cited by
Related resolutions
▶ Cite this page
UN Project. “S/RES/2543(2020).” UN Project, https://un-project.org/votes/resolution/S-RES-2543(2020)/. Accessed .