S/RES/2552(2020) SC
Security Council resolution 2552 (2020) [on extension of the mandate of the UN Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in the Central African Republic (MINUSCA) until 15 Nov. 2021]
75
Session
15
Yes
0
No
0
Abstentions
| Draft symbol | S/2020/1106 |
|---|---|
| Adopted symbol | S/RES/2552(2020) |
| Category | Peace and security |
| UN Document | S/RES/2552(2020) ↗ |
Vote Recorded Vote — S/PV.8776
Full text of resolution
United Nations S/RES/2552 (2020)
Security Council Distr.: General
12 November 2020
Resolution 2552 (2020)
Adopted by the Security Council at its 8776th meeting, on
12 November 2020
The Security Council,
Recalling all of its previous resolutions, statements of its President, and press
statements on the situation in the Central African Republic (CAR),
Reaffirming its strong commitment to the sovereignty, independence, unity and
territorial integrity of the CAR, and recalling the importance of the principles of
non-interference, good-neighbourliness and regional cooperation,
Reaffirming the basic principles of peacekeeping, such as consent of the parties,
impartiality, and non-use of force, except in self-defence and defence of the mandate,
recognising that the mandate of each peacekeeping mission is specific to the need and
situation of the country concerned, underlining that the mandates that it authorises
are consistent with the basic principles, reiterating that the Security Council expects
full delivery of the mandates it authorises, and recalling in this regard its resolution
2436 (2018),
Recalling that the CAR authorities have the primary responsibility to protect all
populations in the CAR in particular from genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and
crimes against humanity, and recalling in this regard the importance of restoring state
authority in all parts of the country,
Emphasizing that any sustainable solution to the crisis in the CAR should be
CAR-owned, including the political process, and should prioritize reconciliation of
the Central African people, through an inclusive process that involves men and
women of all social, economic, political, religious and ethnic backgrounds, including
those displaced by the crisis,
Welcoming the signing of the Political Agreement on Peace and Reconciliation
in the CAR by the CAR authorities and 14 armed groups in Bangui on 6 Febr uary
2019 (“the Peace Agreement”), after the peace talks that took place in Khartoum,
Sudan, within the framework of the African Initiative for Peace and Reconciliation in
the CAR and under the auspices of the African Union (AU) and emphasizing that its
implementation is the only viable path for peace and stability in the CAR,
Welcoming progress in the implementation of the Peace Agreement, including
legislation on decentralisation, the status of political parties and the opposition, and
a pension regime for former elected presidents, decrees setting in motion the
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establishment of the Commission on Truth, Justice, Reparation and Reconciliation,
and the completion of training for the first special mixed security units (USMS),
Condemning in the strongest terms violations of the Peace Agreement and
violence perpetrated by armed groups and other militias, throughout the country,
including their use of landmines, violence aiming at obstructing the electoral process,
incitement to ethnic and religious hatred and violence, violations of international
humanitarian law and human rights violations and abuses, including those committed
against children and those involving sexual and gender-based violence in conflict, as
well as violence directed at civilians from specific communities, resulting in deaths,
injuries and displacements,
Stressing the urgent and imperative need to end impunity in the CAR and to
bring to justice perpetrators of violations of international humanitarian law and of
violations and abuses of human rights,
Underlining the continued need to support national efforts towards the extension
of State authority and the reform of the security sector (SSR) in the CAR,
Welcoming the work carried out by MINUSCA, the African Union Observer
Mission in the CAR (MOUACA), the European Union Training Mission in the CAR
(EUTM-RCA) and the European Union Advisory Mission in the CAR (EUAM-RCA),
as well as the support of CAR’s other international and regional partners, including
France, the Russian Federation, the United States and the People’s Republic of China,
to train and enhance the capacities of the CAR defence and security forces, and
encouraging coherence, transparency and effective coordination of international
support to the CAR,
Condemning cross-border criminal activities, such as arms trafficking, illicit
trade, illegal exploitation, and smuggling of natural resources, including gold,
diamonds, wildlife poaching and trafficking, the use of mercenaries, as well as the
illicit transfer, destabilising accumulation and misuse of small arms and light
weapons, that threaten the peace and stability of the CAR, calling upon the
Government of CAR to work with neighbouring countries to sec ure its borders and
other entry points to prevent the cross-border flows of armed combatants, arms and
conflict minerals and stressing the need for CAR authorities to finalise and
implement, in cooperation with relevant partners, a strategy to tackle the i llegal
exploitation and smuggling of natural resources,
Taking note of the upcoming presidential, legislative and local elections in 2020
and 2021 and underlining the primary responsibility of the CAR authorities in their
organization, noting their efforts to conduct the electoral process in accordance with
the Constitution and welcoming in that regard the commitments made by President
Touadéra during the high level meeting on the CAR he co-chaired with the AU and
the Economic Community of Central African States (ECCAS) on 1 October 2020,
noting the opinion of the Constitutional Court that any change in constitutional
timelines should result from a broad national consultation and consensus, stressing
that only inclusive, free, fair, transparent, credible, p eaceful and timely elections,
undisturbed by disinformation and other forms of manipulation of information, can
bring lasting stability to the CAR, including through the full, equal and meaningful
participation of women, reaffirming the importance of the participation of the youth,
and encouraging the CAR authorities, with the support of relevant partners, to
promote the participation of internally displaced persons (IDPs) and refugees in
accordance with the Constitution of the CAR,
Recalling its resolutions on the protection of civilians in armed conflict, on
Children and Armed Conflict, and on Women Peace and Security and calling upon all
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the parties in the CAR to engage with the Special Representative on Children and
Armed Conflict and the Special Representative on Sexual Violence in Conflict,
Expressing serious concern about the dire humanitarian situation in the CAR
and the consequences of the security situation on humanitarian access, condemning
in the strongest terms increased attacks against humanitarian workers, and
emphasising the current humanitarian needs of more than half of the population of
the country, including civilians under threat from violence, as well as the alarming
situation of IDPs and refugees, and welcoming the collaboration between MINUSCA,
UN agencies, the African Union, the World Bank, technical and financial partners of
the CAR and NGOs to support development and humanitarian efforts in the CAR and
their adaptation to the COVID-19 pandemic, which has exacerbated existing
vulnerabilities,
Recalling the UN guiding principles of humanitarian emergency assistance,
Recalling resolution 2532 (2020) demanding a general and immediate cessation
of hostilities in all situations on the Council’s agenda, as well as calling upon all
parties to armed conflicts to engage immediately in a durable humanitarian pause for
at least 90 consecutive days, in order to enable the safe, timely, unhindered and
sustained delivery of humanitarian assistance in accordance with the humanitarian
principles of humanity, neutrality, impartiality and independence,
Recognising the adverse effects of climate change, ecological changes and
natural disasters, among other factors, on the stability of the Central African region,
including through drought, desertification, land degradation, food insecurity, and
energy access, and stressing the need for adequate risk assessment by the United Nations
relating to these factors and for long-term strategies by governments of the Central
African region and the United Nations to support stabilisation and build resilience,
Condemning in the strongest terms all attacks, provocations and incitement to
hatred and violence against MINUSCA and other international forces by armed
groups or other perpetrators, paying tribute to the personnel of MINUSCA who
sacrificed their lives in the service of peace, underlining that attacks targeting
peacekeepers may constitute war crimes, reminding all parties of their obligations
under international humanitarian law and urging the CAR authorities to work with
MINUSCA to enhance the safety and security of MINUSCA’s personnel, including in
line with resolution 2518 (2020), and to take all possible measures to ensure the arrest
and prosecution of perpetrators,
Recalling resolution 2378 (2017) and its request of the Secretary-General to
ensure that data related to the effectiveness of peacekeeping operations, including
peacekeeping performance data, is used to improve analytics and the evaluation of
mission operations, based on clear and well identified benchmarks, further recalling
resolution 2436 (2018) and its request of the Secretary-General to ensure that
decisions to recognize and incentivize outstanding performance and decisions
regarding deployment, remediation, training, withholding of financial reimbursement,
and repatriation of uniformed or dismissal of civilian personnel, are predicated on
objective performance data, and emphasizing the need to regularly evaluate
MINUSCA’s performance such that the mission retains the skills and flexibility
needed to effectively carry out its mandate,
Taking note of the Report of the Secretary-General of 9 October 2020
(S/2020/994),
Determining that the situation in the CAR continues to constitute a threat to
international peace and security in the region,
Acting under Chapter VII of the Charter of the United Nations,
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Political process, including the implementation of the Peace Agreement
1. Reiterates its support to President Faustin-Archange Touadéra and to his
government in their efforts to promote lasting peace and stability in the CAR through
a comprehensive political process and to adhere to their commitments under the Peace
Agreement;
2. Urges the CAR authorities and the signatory armed groups to fully
implement the Peace Agreement in good faith and without delay in order to meet the
aspirations of the people of the CAR to peace, security, justice, reconciliation,
inclusivity and development, and to resolve their disputes peacefully, including
through the follow-up and dispute resolution mechanisms of the Peace Agreement,
and further calls on all stakeholders in the CAR, to engage urgently and
constructively in the implementation of the Peace Agreement;
3. Demands that armed groups cease violations of the Peace Agreement and
all forms of violence against civilians, United Nations peacekeeper s and humanitarian
personnel, destabilising activities, incitement to hatred and violence, restrictions on
freedom of movement and obstruction of the electoral process, and lay down their
arms, immediately and unconditionally, in line with their commitment s under the
Peace Agreement;
4. Recalls that individuals or entities that undermine peace and stability in
the CAR could be listed for targeted measures pursuant to resolution 2536 (2020);
5. Calls on neighbouring states, regional organisations and all international
partners to support the peace process, including the implementation of the Peace
Agreement, in a coherent and coordinated manner and through strengthened
partnerships, emphasises the important role of the guarantors and facilitators of the
Peace Agreement, including the AU, the ECCAS and neighbouring states, using their
influence to enhance adherence by armed groups to their commitments, also calls on
neighbouring states to support the CAR authorities in their efforts to enable the
participation of refugees in the electoral processes, and further emphasises the
importance of establishing and implementing measures, including sanctions, and
mechanisms that could be applied against non-compliant parties pursuant to article
35 of the Peace Agreement;
6. Calls on the CAR authorities and the authorities of neighbouring countries
to cooperate at the regional level to investigate and combat transnational criminal
networks and armed groups involved in arms trafficking and in the illegal exploitation
of natural resources, calls for the reactivation and regular follow-up of joint bilateral
commissions between the CAR and neighbouring countries to address cross -border
issues, including issues related to arms trafficking, and urges the joint bilateral
commissions between the CAR and Cameroon, the CAR and the Republic of Congo
and the CAR and Chad to take agreed next steps to secure common borders;
7. Encourages the CAR authorities to cement and broaden national
awareness and ownership of the Peace Agreement, including through sensitisation
campaigns, recalls in this regard the crucial role of civil society and faith -based
organisations in the peace and reconciliation process and the need for the CAR
authorities to adequately promote its participation in the implementation of the Peace
Agreement as well as in the comprehensive political process, and further encourages
the full, equal and meaningful participation of women and youth in this process;
8. Urges the CAR authorities to urgently implement a genuinely inclusive
process to support reconciliation in the CAR by addressing the root causes of the
conflict, including the marginalisation of civilians from specific communities, issues
of national identity, local grievances of all the components of society over the whole
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territory of the CAR, and issues related to transhumance, including through national
and local electoral processes and the implementation of political reforms provided
under the Peace Agreement, national policies on economic development and civil
service recruitment, and to promote reconciliation initiatives at the regional, national,
prefectural and local levels;
9. Urges the CAR authorities and all national stakeholders to ensure the
preparation of inclusive, free, fair, transparent, credible, peaceful and timely
presidential, legislative and local elections in 2020 and 2021, in accordance with the
Constitution of the CAR and the decisions of the Constitutional Court, including the
full, equal and meaningful participation of women as voters and candidates,
encourages the participation of youth, calls on all parties to refrain from incitement
to hatred and violence and to engage in dialogue, including through the consultative
framework, in order to solve any outstanding issues regarding the electoral framework
and related reforms, further calls upon CAR authorities to ensure secure conditions
for the conduct of elections and unrestricted access to the polls, including through
cooperation with MINUSCA, consistent with the Mission’s role regarding the
protection of civilians, welcomes in that regard the signing of the integrated security
plan for the elections on 2 October and encourages the international community to
urgently provide adequate support, including technical and financial support, to the
upcoming elections;
10. Calls upon all parties to respect the civilian and humanitarian character of
camps and settlements for IDPs and refugees, as such, also calls upon the CAR
authorities to ensure that national policies and legislative frameworks adequately
protect the human rights of all displaced persons, including freedom of movement,
create conditions conducive to durable solutions for IDPs and refugees on an
informed basis, including their voluntary, safe, dignified and sustainable return, local
integration or resettlement, and provide for their participation in the elections;
11. Urges the CAR authorities to address the presence and activity of armed
groups in the CAR by implementing a comprehensive strategy that prioritises
dialogue and the urgent implementation of an inclusive, gender-sensitive and
effective DDR process, as well as repatriation (DDRR) in the case of foreign fighters,
including children formerly associated with armed forces and groups, as well as
continuing the implementation of community violence reduction projects, also urges
the CAR authorities and signatory armed groups to accelerate the implementation of
the interim security measures provided for in the Peace Agre ement, including the
special mixed security units following vetting, disarmament, demobilisation and
training, to promote trust and confidence between signatory parties and as a platform
for the deployment of State authority, in a manner complementary to D DRR and SSR
processes;
12. Calls on the CAR authorities to implement the National Security Policy,
the National Strategy on SSR and the National Defence Plan, including with the
support of the international community, in order to put in place professiona l,
ethnically representative, regionally balanced, taking into account the recruitment of
women, and appropriately trained and equipped national defence and security forces,
including through the adoption and implementation of appropriate vetting procedure s
of all defence and security personnel, including human rights vetting, as well as
measures to absorb disarmed and demobilised elements of armed groups meeting
rigorous eligibility and vetting criteria;
13. Calls on the CAR authorities to ensure that redeployments of defence and
security forces are sustainable, do not pose a risk to the stabilisation of the country,
civilians or the political process, and demonstrate that the CAR authorities have
strengthened oversight, command and control, and appropria te budgetary support and
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to continue to implement a comprehensive national security strategy that is consistent
with the peace process, including the Peace Agreement;
14. Calls on the CAR authorities to take concrete steps, without delay and as
a matter of priority, to strengthen justice institutions at national and local levels as
part of the extension of State authority in order to fight impunity and to contribute to
stabilisation and reconciliation, including through the restoration of the administrati on
of the judiciary, criminal justice and penitentiary systems throughout the country, the
investigations of the Special Criminal Court (SCC), the demilitarisation of the
prisons, the establishment of transitional justice mechanisms, based on a victim -
centred approach, including the full operationalisation of the Truth, Justice,
Reparation and Reconciliation Commission, which should be able to work in a
neutral, impartial, transparent and independent manner, taking into consideration the
recommendations of the inclusive commission provided for in the Peace Agreement,
to ensure accountability for past crimes and reparation for victims, and by ensuring
access to fair and equal justice for all in line with the conclusions of the Bangui Forum
held in May 2015;
15. Calls on the CAR authorities to continue their efforts to restore the
effective authority of the State over the whole territory of the CAR, including by
redeploying State administration and providing basic services in the provinces,
ensuring the timely payment of salaries to civil servants and defence and security
forces, and by implementing the law on decentralisation, with the objective of
ensuring stable, accountable, inclusive and transparent governance;
16. Stresses in this context the valuable role of the Peacebuilding Commission
(PBC) in bringing strategic advice, providing observations for the Security Council’s
consideration, and fostering a more coherent, coordinated and integrated approach to
international peacebuilding efforts, recognises the active role of the Kingdom of
Morocco, and encourages continued coordination with the PBC and other relevant
international organisations and institutions in support of CAR’s long term peace
building needs;
Economic recovery and development
17. Encourages the CAR authorities, with the support of the international
community, in particular with International Financial Institutions leading
international efforts, and based on critical peace and State building goals, to continue
consolidating public financial management and accountability in a manner that allows
it to meet the expenses related to the functioning of the State, implement early
recovery plans, and revitalise the economy, and that fosters national ownership;
18. Further calls on Member States, international and regional organisations
to disburse pledges made at the international conference in Brussels on 17 November
2016 in support of the implementation of the country’s peacebuilding priorities and
socioeconomic development and consider providing additional funding, technical
expertise and in kind support to the CAR’s National Strategy for Recovery and Peace
Consolidation (RCPCA) and within the Framework of Mutual Accountability
(CEM-RCA);
19. Encourages the CAR authorities to accelerate the effective implementation
of the RCPCA and relevant partners to support the efforts of the CAR authorities
through the RCPCA Secretariat to lay the foundation of durable peace in the CAR and
sustainable development of all regions of the country, to boost peace dividends for
the population and development projects, including critical investments in
infrastructure, which would address logistical challenges in the country and
strengthen the CAR authorities’ and MINUSCA’s mobility and ability to provide
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security and protect civilians, to combat poverty and to help the population of the
CAR build sustainable livelihoods;
Human rights, including child protection and sexual violence in conflict
20. Reiterates the urgent and imperative need to hold accountable all those
responsible for violations of international humanitarian law and violations and abuses
of human rights irrespective of their status or political affiliation, reiterates that some
of those acts may amount to crimes under the Rome Statute of the International
Criminal Court (ICC), to which the CAR is a State party, and recalls that committing
acts of incitement to violence, in particular on an ethnic or religious basis, and then
engaging in or providing support for acts that undermine the peace, stability or
security of the CAR could be a basis for sanctions designations pursuant to resolution
2536 (2020);
21. Recalls the decision made by the Prosecutor of the ICC on 24 September
2014 to open, following the request of the national authorities, an investigation into
alleged crimes committed since 2012 and the ongoing cooperation of the CAR
authorities in this regard;
22. Calls on the CAR authorities to follow-up on the recommendations of the
report of the Mapping Project describing serious violations and abuses of
international human rights and violations of international humanitarian law
committed within the territory of CAR between January 2003 and Decem ber 2015;
23. Urges all parties to armed conflict in the CAR, including armed groups, to
end all violations and abuses committed against children, in violation of applicable
international law, including those involving their recruitment and use, rape and sexual
violence, killing and maiming, abductions and attacks on schools and hospitals,
further calls upon the CAR authorities to respect their obligations under the Optional
Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child on the Involvement of Child ren
in Armed Conflict that they ratified on 21 September 2017, welcomes the adoption of
the child protection code, underlining the importance of its full implementation, and
calls upon the CAR authorities to swiftly investigate alleged violations and abuse s in
order to fight against impunity of those responsible, to ensure that those responsible
for such violations and abuses are excluded from the security sector and that all
victims have access to justice as well as to medical and support services, calls for the
full and immediate implementation of action plans signed by some armed groups and
for other armed groups to sign such action plans, reiterates its demands that all parties
protect and consider as victims those children who have been released or othe rwise
separated from armed forces and armed groups, in particular by establishing standard
operating procedures for the rapid handover of these children to relevant civilian child
protection actors, recalls that the Peace Agreement contains several child protection
provisions and urges the signatories to it to reinforce their efforts to implement those,
and emphasises the need to pay particular attention to the protection, release and
reintegration of all children associated with armed forces and armed grou ps;
24. Calls upon all parties to armed conflict in the CAR, including armed
groups, to end sexual and gender-based violence, further calls upon the CAR
authorities to swiftly investigate alleged abuses in order to fight against impunity of
those responsible for such acts, and to take concrete, specific and time-bound steps
towards implementing the UN and government of CAR joint communiqué to prevent
and respond to sexual violence in conflict and to ensure that those responsible for
such crimes are excluded from the security sector and prosecuted, and to facilitate
immediate access for all survivors of sexual violence to available services, calls on
the CAR authorities and international partners to sustain adequate support to the
Mixed Unit for Rapid Intervention and Suppression of Sexual Violence against
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Women and Children (UMIRR), and further calls for the swift prosecution of alleged
perpetrators;
MINUSCA’s mandate
25. Expresses its strong support to the Special Representative of the Secretary-General Mankeur Ndiaye;
26. Decides to extend the mandate of MINUSCA until 15 November 2021;
27. Decides that MINUSCA shall continue to comprise up to 11,650 military
personnel, including 480 Military Observers and Military Staff Officers, and 2,080
police personnel, including 400 Individual Police Officers and 1,680 formed police
unit personnel, as well as 108 corrections officers and recalls its intention to keep this
number under continuous review;
28. Decides that MINUSCA’s strategic objective is to support the creation of
the political, security and institutional conditions conducive to the sustainable
reduction of the presence of, and threat posed by, armed groups through a
comprehensive approach and proactive and robust posture without prejudice to the
basic principles of peacekeeping;
29. Recalls that MINUSCA’s mandate should be implemented based on a
prioritisation of tasks established in paragraphs 31 to 33 of this resolution , and, when
relevant, in a sequenced manner, and further requests the Secretary-General to reflect
this prioritisation in the deployment of the Mission and to align budgetary resources
according to the prioritisation of mandate tasks as set out in this res olution, while
ensuring appropriate resources for the implementation of the mandate;
30. Authorises MINUSCA to take all necessary means to carry out its mandate
within its capabilities and areas of deployment;
Priority tasks
31. Decides that the mandate of MINUSCA shall include the following
priority tasks:
(a) Protection of civilians
(i) To protect, in line with S/PRST/2018/18 of 21 September 2018, without
prejudice to the primary responsibility of the CAR authorities and the basic principles
of peacekeeping, the civilian population under threat of physical violence;
(ii) In support of the CAR authorities, to take active steps to anticipate, deter
and effectively respond to serious and credible threats to the civilian population
through a comprehensive and integrated approach and, in this regard:
– to ensure effective and dynamic protection of civilians under threat of physical
violence through a comprehensive and integrated approach, including by
anticipating, deterring, and stopping all armed groups, signatories of the Peace
Agreement and non-signatories, and local militias from inflicting violence on
the populations, in consultation with local communities, and by supporting and
undertaking local mediation efforts to prevent escalation of violence, in line
with the basic principles of peacekeeping, including in cases of violations of the
Peace Agreement, and outbreaks of violence between ethnic or religious rival
groups;
– to enhance its interaction with civilians, to strengthen its early warning
mechanism, to increase its efforts to monitor and document violations of
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international humanitarian law and violations and abuses of human rights and
to strengthen local community engagement and empowerment;
– to maintain a proactive deployment and a mobile, flexible and robust posture,
including by conducting active patrolling, in particular in high risk areas;
– to mitigate the risk to civilians 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 in support of
national security forces;
– to work with the CAR authorities to identify and report threats to and attacks
against civilians and implement existing prevention and response plans and
strengthen civil-military cooperation, including joint planning;
(iii) To provide specific protection for women and children affected by armed
conflict, including through the deployment of child protection advisers, women
protection advisers and gender advisers and by adopting a gender-sensitive, survivorcentred approach in this regard, especially to provide the best assistance to survivors
of sexual violence;
(iv) To fully implement its protection of civilians strategy in coordination with
CAR authorities, the United Nations Country Team (UNCT), humanitarian and
human right organisations, and other relevant partners;
(b) Good offices and support to the peace process, including the implementation
of the Peace Agreement, elections, national reconciliation, social cohesion and
transitional justice at national and local levels
(i) To continue its political role in the peace process, including through
political, technical and operational support to the implementation of the Peace
Agreement and to take active steps to support the CAR authorities in the creation of
the conditions conducive to the full implementation of the Peace Agreement;
(ii) To ensure that the Mission’s political and security strategies promote a
coherent peace process, particularly in support of the Peace Agreement, that connects
local and national peace efforts with the ongoing efforts to advance DDRR process,
the SSR process, the fight against impunity, and the restoration of State authority;
(iii) To assist the CAR authorities’ efforts, at national and local levels, for an
increased participation of political parties, civil society, women, survivors of sexual
violence, youth, faith-based organisations, and where and when possible, IDPs and
refugees to the peace process, including the Peace Agreement;
(iv) To provide good offices and technical expertise in support of eff orts to
address the root causes of conflict, including those referred to in paragraph 8 of this
resolution, in particular to advance national reconciliation and local conflict
resolution, working with relevant regional and local bodies and religious leader s,
while ensuring the full, equal and meaningful participation of women, including
survivors of sexual violence, in line with the CAR action plan on Women, Peace and
Security, including through the support to local dialogue and community engagement;
(v) To support efforts of the CAR authorities to address transitional justice as
part of the peace and reconciliation process, and marginalisation and local grievances,
including through dialogue with the armed groups, civil society leaders including
women and youth representatives, including survivors of sexual violence, and by
assisting national, prefectoral and local authorities to foster confidence among
communities;
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(vi) To provide technical expertise to the CAR authorities in its engagement
with neighbouring countries, the ECCAS, and the AU, in consultation and
coordination with the United Nations Regional Office for Central Africa (UNOCA)
to resolve issues of common and bilateral interest and to promote their continued and
full support for the Peace Agreement;
(vii) To make more proactive use of strategic communications to support its
protection of civilians’ strategy, in coordination with the CAR authorities, to help the
local population better understand the mandate of the Mission, its activities, th e Peace
Agreement and the electoral process, and to build trust with the CAR citizens, parties
to the conflict, regional and other international actors and partners on the ground;
(viii) To continue to coordinate international support and assistance to t he peace
process, including through the International Support Group, as appropriate;
(c) 2020/2021 elections
To assist the CAR authorities in the preparation and delivery of peaceful
presidential, legislative and local elections of 2020/2021, as outlined in the preamble
and in paragraph 9 of this resolution, by providing good offices, including to
encourage dialogue among all political stakeholders, in an inclusive manner, to
mitigate tensions throughout the electoral period, by also providing security,
operational, logistical and, as appropriate, technical support, in particular to facilitate
access to remote areas, and by coordinating international electoral assistance;
(d) Facilitate the creation of a secure environment for the immediate, full, safe and
unhindered delivery of humanitarian assistance
To improve coordination with all humanitarian actors, including United Nations
agencies, and to facilitate the creation of a secure environment for the immediate,
full, safe and unhindered, civilian-led delivery of humanitarian assistance, in
accordance with relevant provisions of international law and the human itarian
principles, and for the voluntary safe, dignified and sustainable return or local
integration or resettlement of internally displaced persons or refugees in close
coordination with humanitarian actors, while contributing to alleviate the
consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic as requested in resolution 2532 (2020);
(e) Protection of the United Nations
To protect the United Nations personnel, installations, equipment and goods and
ensure the security and freedom of movement of United Nations and associated
personnel;
Other tasks
32. Further authorises MINUSCA to pursue the following tasks of its
mandate, bearing in mind that these tasks as well as those in paragraph 31 above are
mutually reinforcing:
(a) Support for the extension of State authority, the deployment of security forces,
and the preservation of territorial integrity
(i) To continue to support the CAR authorities in implementing its strategy
for the extension of State authority, including through the implementation of relevant
provisions of the Peace Agreement, for the establishment of interim security and
administrative arrangements acceptable to the population and under CAR authorities’
oversight, and through a prioritised division of labour with the UNCT and relevant
partners;
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(ii) To support a gradual handover of security of key officials, and static guard
duties of national institutions, to the CAR security forces, in coordination with the
CAR authorities, based on the risks on the ground and taking into account the
electoral context;
(iii) To promote and support the rapid extension of State authority over the
entire territory of the CAR, including by supporting the deployment of vetted and
trained national police and gendarmerie in priority areas, including through
co-location, advising, mentoring and monitoring, in coordination with other partners,
as part of the deployment of the territorial administration and other rule of law
authorities;
(iv) To provide enhanced planning and technical assistance and limited
logistical support for the progressive redeployment of a limited number of Central
African Armed Forces (FACA) units trained or certified by EUTM -RCA, and a
limited number of vetted or trained Internal Security Forces (ISF), engaged in joint
operations with MINUSCA that include joint planning and tactical cooperation, in
order to support the implementation of MINUSCA’s current mandated tasks,
including to protect civilians, and to support national authorit ies in the restoration and
maintenance of public safety and the rule of law, in accordance with MINUSCA’s
mandate and the United Nations Human Rights Due Diligence Policy (HRDDP),
without exacerbating the risks to the stabilisation of the country, civilian s, the
political process, to UN peacekeepers, or the impartiality of the Mission, to perform
this task by reallocating approved resources, and to review this limited logistical
support in one year to ensure its compliance with the benchmarks outlined in th e
Secretary-General’s letter to the President of the Security Council of 15 May 2018
(S/2018/463);
(b) Security Sector Reform (SSR)
(i) To provide strategic and technical advice to the CAR authorities to
implement the National Strategy on SSR and the National Defence Plan, in close
coordination with EUTM-RCA, EUAM-RCA, the African Union Observer Mission
in the CAR (MOUACA) and CAR’s other international partners, including France,
the Russian Federation, the United States and the People’s Republic of China, with
the aim of ensuring coherence of the SSR process, including through a clear
delineation of responsibilities between the FACA, the I SF and other uniformed
entities, as well as the democratic control of both defence and internal security forces;
(ii) To continue to support the CAR authorities in developing an approach to
the vetting of defence and security elements which includes huma n rights vetting, in
particular to fight impunity for violations of international and domestic law and in the
context of any integration of demobilised armed groups elements into security sector
institutions;
(iii) To take a leading role in supporting the CAR authorities in enhancing the
capacities of the ISF, particularly command and control structures and oversight
mechanisms and to coordinate the provision of technical assistance and training
between the international partners in the CAR, in particular with EUTM-RCA and
EUAM-RCA, in order to ensure a clear distribution of tasks in the field of SSR;
(iv) To continue to support the CAR authorities in the training of police and
gendarmerie and in the selection, recruitment, and vetting of police and genda rmerie
elements, with the support of donors and the UNCT, taking into account the need to
recruit women at all levels, and in full compliance with the United Nations HRDDP;
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(c) Disarmament, Demobilisation, Reintegration (DDR) and Repatriation (DDRR)
(i) To support the CAR authorities in implementing an inclusive and
progressive programme for the DDR and, in case of foreign elements, repatriation, of
members of armed groups, based on the Principles of DDRR and Integration into the
Uniformed Corps, signed at the Bangui Forum in May 2015, while paying specific
attention to the needs of children associated with armed forces and groups, the need
to ensure the separation of children from these forces and groups, and the need to
prevent re-recruitment, and including gender-sensitive programmes;
(ii) To support the CAR authorities and relevant civil society organisations in
developing and implementing CVR programmes, including gender-sensitive
programmes, for members of armed groups including those not eligib le for
participation in the national DDRR programme, in cooperation with development
partners and together with communities of return in line with the priorities highlighted
in the RCPCA;
(iii) To provide technical assistance to the CAR authorities in im plementing a
national plan for the integration of eligible demobilised members of armed groups
into the security and defence forces, in line with the broader SSR process, the need
to put in place professional, ethnically representative and regionally balan ced national
security and defence, and to provide technical advice to the CAR authorities in
accelerating the implementation of the interim security arrangements provided for in
the Peace Agreement, such as the special mixed security units following vettin g,
disarmament, demobilisation and training;
(iv) To coordinate the support provided by multilateral and bilateral partners,
including the World Bank, to the efforts of the CAR authorities on DDRR programs
to reintegrate eligible and vetted members of the armed groups into peaceful civilian
life and to help ensure that these efforts will lead to sustainable socioeconomic
reintegration;
(d) Promotion and protection of human rights
(i) To monitor, help investigate, and timely report to the Security Co uncil and
publicly on violations of international humanitarian law and on violations and abuses
of human rights committed throughout the CAR;
(ii) To monitor, help investigate and ensure reporting on violations and abuses
committed against children and women, including rape and other forms of sexual
violence in armed conflict, in connection with the UMIRR;
(iii) To assist the CAR authorities in their efforts to protect and promote human
rights and prevent violations and abuses and to strengthen the capacity of civil society
organisations;
(e) Support for national and international justice, the fight against impunity, and
the rule of law
(i) To help reinforce the independence of the judiciary, build the capacities,
and enhance the effectiveness of the national judicial system as well as the
effectiveness and the accountability of the penitentiary system including through the
provision of technical assistance to the CAR authorities to identify, investigate and
prosecute those responsible for crimes involving violations of international
humanitarian law and of violations and abuses of human rights committed throughout
the CAR;
(ii) To help build the capacities of the national human rights institution
coordinating with the Independent Expert on human rights in the CAR as appropriate;
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Urgent temporary measures:
(iii) To urgently and actively adopt, within the limits of its capacities and areas
of deployment, at the formal request of the CAR authorities and in areas where
national security forces are not present or operational, urgent temporary measures on
an exceptional basis, without creating a precedent and without prejudice to the agreed
principles of peacekeeping operations, which are limited in scope, time -bound and
consistent with the objectives set out in paragraphs 31 and 32 (e), to arrest and detain
in order to maintain basic law and order and fight impunity and to pay particular
attention in this regard to those engaging in or providing support for acts that
undermine the peace, stability or security of the CAR;
Special Criminal Court (SCC):
(iv) To provide technical assistance, in partnership with other international
partners and the UNCT, and capacity building for the CAR authorities, to facilitate
the operationalisation and the functioning of the SCC, in particular in the areas of
investigations, arrests, detention, criminal and forensic analysis, evidence collection
and storage, recruitment and selection of personnel, court management, prosecution
strategy and case development and the establishment of a legal aid system, as
appropriate, as well as to provide security for magistrates, including at the premises
and proceedings of the SCC, and take measures for the protection of victims and
witnesses, in line with the CAR’s international humanitarian law and international
human rights obligations;
(v) To assist in the coordination and mobilisation of increased bilateral and
multilateral support to the functioning of the SCC;
Rule of law:
(vi) To provide support and to coordinate international assistance to build the
capacities and enhance the effectiveness of the criminal justice system, within the
framework of the United Nations global focal point on rule of law, as well as the
effectiveness and the accountability of police and penitentiary system with the
support of the UNCT;
(vii) Without prejudice to the primary responsibility of the CAR authorities, to
support the restoration and maintenance of public safety and the rule of law, including
through apprehending and handing over to the CAR authorities, consistent with
international law, those in the country responsible for crimes involving serious human
rights violations and abuses and serious violations of international humanitarian law,
including sexual violence in conflict, so that they can be brought to justice, and
through cooperation with states of the region as well as the ICC in cases of crimes
falling within its jurisdiction following the decision made by the Prosecutor of the
ICC on 24 September 2014 to open, following the request of national authorities, an
investigation into alleged crimes committed since 2012;
Additional tasks
33. Further authorises MINUSCA to carry out the following additional tasks:
(a) To assist the Committee established pursuant to paragraph 57 of resolution
2127 (2013) and the Panel of Experts established by the same resolution;
(b) To monitor the implementation of the measures renewed and modified by
paragraph 1 of resolution 2536 (2020), in cooperation with the Panel of Experts
established pursuant to resolution 2127 (2013), including by inspecting, as it deems
necessary and when appropriate without notice, all arms and related materiel
regardless of location, and advise the CAR authorities on efforts to keep armed groups
from exploiting natural resources;
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(c) To support the Panel of Experts established pursuant to resolution 2127
(2013) in collecting information about acts of incitement to violence, in particular on
an ethnic or religious basis, that undermine the peace, stability or security of the CAR
in accordance with paragraph 32 (g) of resolution 2399 (2018) extended by paragraph
6 of resolution 2536 (2020);
(d) To ensure, with all relevant United Nations bodies, unhindered access and
safety for the Panel of Experts established pursuant to resolution 2127 (2013), in
particular to persons, documents and sites within their control in order for the Panel
to execute its mandate;
(e) To provide transport for relevant CAR authorities as appropriate and on a
case by case basis and when the situation allows, as a means to promote and support
the extension of the State authority over the entire territory;
Mission effectiveness
34. Requests the Secretary-General to deploy and allocate personnel and
expertise within MINUSCA to reflect the priorities identified by paragraph 31 to
paragraph 33 of this resolution, and to continuously adjust this deployment according
to the progresses made in the implementation of this mandate;
35. Reiterates its concern at the continuing lack of key capabilities for
MINUSCA and the need to fill gaps, in particular in the field of military helicopters,
as well as the importance of current and future troop and police contributing countries
(T/PCCs) providing troops and police with adequate capabilities, equipment and
predeployment training in order to enhance the capacity of MINUSCA to operate
effectively;
36. Recognizes 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;
37. Requests the Secretary-General, Member States, and the CAR authorities
to continue to take all appropriate measures to review and enhance the safety and
security of MINUSCA’s personnel, in line with resolution 2518 (2020);
38. Welcomes the initiatives undertaken by the Secretary-General to
standardize 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 p olicy 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 MINUS CA
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 MINUSCA uniformed or civilian personnel,
including mission leadership and mission support personnel, consistent with
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resolution 2436 (2018); notes the efforts of the Secretary-General to develop a
comprehensive performance assessment system;
39. Requests the Secretary-General and the troop and police contributing
countries to seek to increase the number of women in MINUSCA, as well as to ensure
the full, equal and meaningful participation of uniformed and civilian women at all
levels and in all positions, including in senior leadership positions, and to implement
other relevant provisions of resolution 2538 (2020);
40. Commends the commitment of the T/PCCs in implementing the Mission’s
mandate in a challenging environment, and in this connection highlights that
undeclared national caveats, lack of effective command and control, refusal to obey
orders, failure to respond to attacks on civilians, and inadequate equipment may
adversely affect the shared responsibility for effective mandate implementation and
should not be accepted by the Secretary-General;
41. Requests the Secretary-General to continue to take necessary measures to
ensure full compliance of all personnel in MINUSCA with the United Nations zero -
tolerance policy on sexual exploitation and abuse and to keep the Council fully
informed 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 its resolution 2272 (2016), and urges troop- and police-contributing countries to
take appropriate preventative action including vetting of all personnel, pre-deployment
and in-mission awareness training, and to take appropriate steps to ensure full
accountability in cases of such conduct involving their personnel, including through
timely investigations of allegations by troop- and police-contributing countries, and
MINUSCA as appropriate, holding perpetrators to account, and repatriating units
when there is credible evidence of widespread or systemic sexual exploitation and
abuse by those units;
42. Requests MINUSCA 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;
Child protection
43. Requests MINUSCA to take fully into account child protection as a crosscutting issue throughout its mandate and to assist the CAR authorities in ensuring that
the protection of children’s rights is taken into account, inter ali a, in the DDRR and
SRR processes in order to end and prevent violations and abuses against children;
Gender
44. Requests MINUSCA to take fully into account gender mainstreaming as a
cross-cutting issue throughout its mandate and to assist the CAR au thorities in
ensuring the full, equal and meaningful participation, involvement and representation
of women, including survivors of sexual violence, in all spheres and at all levels,
including in the political and reconciliation process and the implementat ion of the
Peace Agreement, stabilization activities, transitional justice, the work of the SCC
and of the Truth, Justice, Reparation and Reconciliation Commission, SSR and DDRR
processes, the preparation and holding of the 2020/2021 elections through, int er alia,
the provision of gender advisers;
Weapon and ammunition management
45. Requests MINUSCA to actively seize, record, dispose of, and destroy, as
appropriate, weapons and ammunitions of disarmed combatants and armed groups
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who refuse or fail to lay down their arms and present an imminent threat to civilians
or the stability of the State, in keeping with its efforts to seize and collect arms and
any related material the supply, sale or transfer of which violate the measures imposed
by paragraphs 1 of resolution 2536 (2020);
46. Calls upon the CAR authorities in coordination with MINUSCA, including
UNMAS, and international partners to address the illicit transfer, destabilising
accumulation, and misuse of small arms and light weapons in the CAR, and to ensure
the safe and effective management, storage and security of stockpiles of small arms
and light weapons and the collection and/or destruction of surplus, seized, unmarked,
or illicitly held weapons and ammunition, and further requests MINUSCA to provide
technical assistance to the CAR authorities in the implementation of the national
action plan of the “Commission nationale de lutte contre la prolifération des armes
légères et de petit calibre”;
MINUSCA Freedom of movement
47. Urges all parties in the CAR to cooperate fully with the deployment and
activities of MINUSCA, in particular by ensuring its safety, security and freedom of
movement with unhindered and immediate access throughout the territory of the CAR
to enable MINUSCA to carry out fully its mandate in a complex envir onment;
48. Calls upon Member States, especially those in the region, to ensure the
free, unhindered and expeditious movement to and from the CAR of all personnel, as
well as equipment, provisions, supplies and other goods, including vehicles and spare
parts, which are for the exclusive and official use of MINUSCA;
Humanitarian access and humanitarian appeal
49. Demands that all parties allow and facilitate the full, safe, immediate and
unhindered access for the timely delivery of humanitarian assis tance to populations
in need, in particular to internally displaced persons, throughout the territory of the
CAR, in accordance with relevant provisions of international law and the
humanitarian principles;
50. Further demands that all parties ensure respect and protection of all
medical personnel and humanitarian personnel exclusively engaged in medical duties,
their means of transport and equipment, as well as hospitals and other medical
facilities;
51. Calls on Member States and international and regional organisations to
respond swiftly to the humanitarian needs identified in the humanitarian response
plan through increased contributions and to ensure that all pledges are honoured in
full and in a timely manner;
Support to MINUSCA
52. Authorises French armed forces, within the provisions of their existing
bilateral agreement with the CAR and the limits of their capacities and areas of
deployment, at the request of the Secretary-General, to use all the means to provide
operational support to elements of MINUSCA when under serious threat, from the
date of adoption of this resolution, and requests France to ensure reporting to the
Council on the implementation of this mandate and to coordinate its reporting with
that of the Secretary-General referred to in paragraph 54 of this resolution;
Reports by the Secretary-General
53. Requests the Secretary-General to review and report on a regular basis the
conditions required for the transition, drawdown and withdrawal of the United
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Nations operation, in a manner which does not prejudice overall efforts to support
long term objectives for peace and stability;
54. Requests the Secretary-General to report to the Council on 15 February
2021, 15 June 2021 and 11 October 2021, including on:
– the situation in the CAR, including the security situation, the priority political
elements as defined above regarding the political process, including the
electoral process and other issues as set out in paragraph 9 and 12 of this
resolution, and the implementation of the Peace Agreement, progress on
mechanisms and capacity to advance governance and fiscal management, and
relevant information on the progress, promotion and protection of human rights
and international humanitarian law and on the protection of civilians;
– the status of the implementation of MINUSCA’s mandated tasks, including
support to non-United Nations security forces in strict compliance with the
HRDDP, including by providing appropriate financial information;
– force and police generation and deployment of all MINUSCA’s constituent
elements, and information on the progress in the implementation of the measures
taken to improve MINUSCA’s performance, including measures to ensure force
effectiveness as outlined in paragraphs 34 to 42, as well as information on the
implementation of the zero-tolerance policy on sexual exploitation and abuse as
outlined in paragraph 41;
55. Decides to remain actively seized of the matter.
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