S/RES/2584(2021) SC
Security Council resolution 2584 (2021) [on extension of the mandate of the UN Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in Mali (MINUSMA) until 30 June 2022]
76
Session
15
Yes
0
No
0
Abstentions
| Draft symbol | S/2021/610 |
|---|---|
| Adopted symbol | S/RES/2584(2021) |
| Category | Peace and security |
| UN Document | S/RES/2584(2021) ↗ |
Vote Recorded Vote — S/PV.8809
Full text of resolution
United Nations S/RES/2584 (2021)
Security Council Distr.: General
29 June 2021
Resolution 2584 (2021)
Adopted by the Security Council at its 8809th meeting, on
29 June 2021
The Security Council,
Recalling all its previous resolutions, statements of its President and press
statements on the situation in Mali,
Reaffirming its strong commitment to the sovereignty, unity and territorial
integrity of Mali, emphasizing that the Malian authorities have primary responsibility
for the provision of stability, security and protection of civilians throughout the
territory of Mali, urging the Malian authorities to uphold their efforts to meet their
obligations in that regard, and expressing great concern at the violent and unilateral
actions taken by non-State actors hampering the return of State authority and basic
social services,
Reaffirming the basic principles of peacekeeping, including consent of the
parties, impartiality and non-use of force, except in self-defence and defence of the
mandate, recognizing that the mandate of each peacekeeping mission is specific to
the need and situation of the country concerned, and recalling its Presidential
Statement of 14 May 2018 (S/PRST/2018/10),
Expressing grave concern about the continued deterioration of the political,
security and humanitarian situation in Mali, including through the persistence of a
high level of attacks by terrorist groups in the North and in the C entre, and the
continuation of intercommunal violence in the Centre, which led to human rights
violations and abuses and violations of international humanitarian law and have
caused the loss of numerous innocent lives as well as numerous internally displac ed
persons and refugees in neighbouring countries, people in critical need of assistance
and children without access to education due to school closures, and have hindered
humanitarian access, expressing concern over the extension of insecurity to Southern
Mali, further expressing concern over the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and the
significant ongoing food crisis in Mali, and further expressing deep concern that the
situation in Mali negatively impacts that of neighbouring countries and of the Sahel
region,
Emphasizing that security and stability in Mali are inextricably linked to that of
the Sahel and West Africa, as well as to that of Libya and North Africa,
Strongly condemning the continued attacks against civilians, representatives
from local, regional and State institutions, as well as national, international and UN
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security forces, including the Malian Defence and Security Forces (MDSF), the G5
Sahel joint force (FC-G5S), the United Nations Multidimensional Integrated
Stabilization Mission in Mali (MINUSMA), the French forces and the European
partners, including Task Force Takuba, and the European Union Training Mission in
Mali (EUTM Mali), paying tribute to the bravery and sacrifices made by the soldiers
engaged in Mali and the Sahel, especially to those who lost their lives, and calling
for continuing support to the MDSF in their fight against terrorism,
Welcoming the appointment of El-Ghassim Wane as the new Special
Representative of the Secretary-General in Mali,
Underlining that lasting peace and security in the Sahel region will not be
achieved without a combination of political, security, peacebuilding and sustainable
development efforts benefitting all regions of Mali, as well as the full, effective and
inclusive implementation of the Agreement on Peace and Reconciliation in Mali (“the
Agreement”), and ensures full, equal and meaningful participation of women and
youth, and welcoming in this regard the increased representation of women in the
Comité de suivi de l’Accord (CSA),
Recognizing that an integrated and coherent approach among relevant political,
security and developmental actors, within and outside of the United Nations system,
consistent with their respective mandates, is critical to building and sustaining peace
in Mali and the Sahel welcoming the appointment of a Special Coordinator for
development in the Sahel, noting the involvement of the Peacebuilding Commission
on the Sahel and recalling the necessity to boost the implementation of the United
Nations Integrated Strategy for the Sahel (UNISS) and the United Nations Support
Plan for the Sahel,
Welcoming the Ndjamena Summit of the G5 Sahel and their partners of
16 February 2021 which called for a civil and political surge and further welcoming
the steps taken in advancing the “Coalition for the Sahel”, aimed at fighting against
terrorism, strengthening the Sahelian States’ military capabilities, supporting the
restoration of State authority throughout the territory, and bolstering development
assistance, the Takuba Task Force, a multinational special forces task force designed
to advise, assist and accompany the MDSF, the Partnership for Security and Stability
in the Sahel and the Sahel Alliance,
Recalling the establishment of the transitional arrangements in Mali, including
a Transition Charter, a Transition Action Plan, and an election calendar, welcoming
the mediation by the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) and
the role of the Monitoring Mechanism it has announced to ensure respect of these
arrangements, including the electoral calendar unveiled on 15th April 2021,
Strongly condemning the violation of the Transition Charter constituted by the
arbitrary arrest of the transitional leaders by elements of the Defense and Security
forces on 24 May 2021, calling for the immediate resumption of the inclusive
transition in Mali leading to elections and constitutional order within the established
18-month timeline, in accordance with the Transition Charter, including presidential
election on 27 February 2022 as per the transition government’s electoral calendar,
and taking note of the conclusions of the ECOWAS extraordinary Summit on the
political situation in Mali held on 30 May 2021,
Reiterating that the UN and other international partners remain firmly
committed to the implementation of the Agreement as a means to achieve long -term
peace and stability in Mali, welcoming the updated Feuille de route on the
implementation of the Agreement, efforts by the CSA to enhance its role in support
of this implementation, and the first two meetings of the CSA outside of Bamako held
in Kidal and Kayes, but expressing a significant impatience with parties over the
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persistent delays in the implementation of the Agreement, which contribute to a
political and security vacuum jeopardizing the stability and development of Mali,
stressing the need for increased ownership and prioritization in the implementation
of the Agreement, and reiterating that engaging in hostilities in violation of the
Agreement as well as actions taken that obstruct, or that obstruct by prolonged delay,
or that threaten the implementation of the Agreement constitute a basis for sanctions
designations pursuant to resolution 2374 (2017), among other designation criteria,
Stressing that stabilization of the situation in Central Mali requires the Malian
authorities and relevant stakeholders to agree on and effectively i mplement a
comprehensive politically led strategy, and to pursue simultaneous and coordinated
action on security, governance, sustainable development, reconciliation,
accountability, as well as protection and promotion of human rights,
Strongly condemning all violations and abuses of international human rights law
and violations of international humanitarian law, including those involving
extrajudicial and summary executions, arbitrary arrests and detentions and ill -
treatment of prisoners, sexual and gender-based violence, and trafficking in persons,
as well as killing, maiming, recruitment and use of children, attacks against schools,
humanitarian actors and services, and medical personnel and infrastructure identified
as such, and calling upon all parties to bring an end to such violations and abuses and
to comply with their obligations under applicable international law,
Reiterating, in this regard, the importance of holding accountable all those
responsible for such acts and that some of such acts referred to in the paragraph above
may amount to crimes under the Rome Statute, taking note that, acting upon the
referral of the transitional authorities of Mali dated 13 July 2012, the Prosecutor of
the International Criminal Court (ICC) opened on 16 January 2013 an investigation
into alleged crimes committed on the territory of Mali since January 2012, and further
taking note of the finalization of the work of the International Commission of Inquiry
established in accordance with the Agreement and as requested by resolution 2364
(2017),
Underlining the importance of socio-economic development for sustaining
peace in Mali through sustainable economic development including infrastructure
development, industrialization, poverty eradication, job creation, agricultural
modernization and promotion of entrepreneurship, expressing the need for continued
support to Mali taking into account its national priorities and needs, underscoring the
importance of the rule of law in support of socio-economic development, and noting
that AU PCRD highlights the need for undertaking comprehensive institutio nbuilding to enhance good economic governance through the reinforcement of fiscal
and financial management institutions in support of effective revenue collection,
monitoring and evaluation mechanisms and anti-corruption structures to ensure
accountability and transparency,
Emphasizing the need for adequate risk assessment and risk management
strategies, by the Government of Mali and the United Nations, of ecological changes,
natural disasters, drought, desertification, land degradation, food insecurity, energy
access, climate change, among other factors, on the security and stability of Mali,
Commending troop- and police- contributing countries of MINUSMA for their
contribution, paying tribute to the peacekeepers who risk, as well as lost, their lives
in this respect,
Welcoming MINUSMA’s efforts to implement its adaptation plan, with a view
to integrating all mission components and increasing its protection, mobility,
reactivity and flexibility, notably by setting-up a Mobile Task Force,
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Expressing concern over reports of some training and capabilities shortfalls of
MINUSMA units, undeclared caveats, non-compliance with orders, and emphasizing
the importance of transparency and accountability of the mission’s performance,
Recognizing that, in light of the specific and challenging environment in which
it is deployed, MINUSMA interacts with other security presences which have the
potential to be mutually beneficial instruments to restore peace and stability in Mali
and the Sahel region,
Taking note of the report of the Secretary-General (S/2021/519) and the letter
of the Secretary-General (S/2021/520),
Determining that the situation in Mali continues to constitute a threat to
international peace and security,
Acting under Chapter VII of the Charter of the United Nations,
Implementation of the Agreement on Peace and Reconciliation in Mali, Political
Transition and elections
1. Calls on all Malian stakeholders to facilitate the resumption and full
realization of the Political Transition and the handover of power to elected civilian
authorities, reaffirms in this regard the imperative need to respect the transition period
of 18 months as decided during the meeting of ECOWAS Heads of States on
15 September 2020 and as set out in the Transition Charter, further reaffirms the
announced elections calendar with presidential and legislative elections scheduled for
27 February 2022 and further calls for the swift operationalization of the mechanism
to ensure respect for the time-limited Political Transition that should closely involve
the United Nations and the critical other partners of Mali;
2. Calls on the Malian Transition Government to organize free and fair
presidential, as well as legislative, regional and local elections and a constitutional
referendum, as appropriate, within the 18-month timeline, as announced in the
electoral calendar, conducted in a transparent and inclusive manner, with the full,
equal and meaningful participation of women, youth, refugees and internally
displaced persons, reiterates in this regard decisions that the Head of the Transition,
the Vice-president and the Prime minister of the Transition should not under any
circumstances be candidates for the forthcoming presidential election, and insists on
the need to prioritize building trust, engaging in dialogue and willingness to
compromise, in order to make sure the Transition is consensual, inclusive and lays
the foundations for a more stable, democratic and peaceful country;
3. Welcomes the steps taken in advancing the implementation of the
Agreement but regrets the slow pace of its implementation, urges the Government of
Mali and the Plateforme and Coordination armed groups (“the Malian parties”) to
accelerate this implementation, through significant, meaningful and irreversible
measures, and recalls its readiness to respond with measures pursuant to resolution
2374 (2017) should the parties engage in hostilities in violation of the Agreement,
take actions that obstruct, or that obstruct by prolonged delay, or that threaten the
implementation of the Agreement;
4. Urges the Malian parties to effectively fulfil the following priority
measures before the end of MINUSMA’s current mandate:
– achieve the Political Transition, the return to constitutional order and the power
handover to democratically elected civilian authorities within the 18 -month
timeline set out in the Transition Charter and in accordance with the demands
expressed by ECOWAS on 30 May 2021 with presidential election on
27 February 2022,
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– reach agreement on the sequencing of political and institutional reform
processes stipulated by the Agreement and the constitutional reform, consistent
with the Agreement’s provisions and the conclusions of the National Inclusiv e
Dialogue,
– reach agreement on the design and start implementation of an inclusive security
sector reform, consistent with the Agreement’s provisions,
– redeploy all the elements who underwent the accelerated disarmament,
demobilization and reintegration (DDR) process, pursue this process with a
view to vet, integrate into the MDSF and train 2,000 additional elements of the
signatory armed groups, and launch the socio-economic reinsertion of
ex-combatants willing to return to a civilian life,
– finalize the legal framework for the Territorial Police and start vetting and
recruiting its members, including former members of the signatory armed
groups,
– launch all sixteen Sustainable Development Fund projects approved by the
steering committee, especially those regarding the Northern Development Zone,
and prioritize other interventions of this Fund,
– increase the meaningful representation of women in all the CSA mechanisms,
including its subcommittees and operationalize the women’s observatory,
including its regional branches;
5. Calls upon the Malian authorities and all parties in Mali to ensure full,
equal and meaningful participation of women in the mechanisms established by the
Agreement to support and monitor its implementation, and in the Political Transition
and electoral processes, as both candidates and voters, including by meeting at least
the 30 per cent quota for women in all political functions and offices as defined in
Mali’s legislation, addressing risk of harm and ensuring necessary protection for
women in these roles, and providing evidence of progress towards completion of
Agreement-related targets laid out in Mali’s third national plan (2019 –2023) for the
implementation of resolution 1325 (2000), and requests the Secretary-General to pay
specific attention to these points in its regular reporting on MINUSMA;
6. Encourages the Panel of Experts established pursuant to resolution 2374
(2017) to identify parties responsible for potential lack of implementation of the
priority measures referenced in paragraph 4 through its regular reporting and interim
updates, expresses its intent, should these priority measures not be implem ented by
the end of MINUSMA’s current mandate, to respond with measures pursuant to
resolution 2374 (2017) on individuals and entities who are thus obstructing or
threatening the implementation of the Agreement, and stresses that individuals or
entities placed on the 2374 sanctions list shall not benefit from any financial,
operational or logistical support from United Nations entities deployed in Mali, until
their removal from the list and without prejudice to the exemptions set by paragraphs
2, 5, 6 and 7 of resolution 2374 (2017);
7. Calls upon all parties in Mali to strictly abide by the arrangements in place
for a cessation of hostilities, and demands that all armed groups reject violence, cut
off all ties with terrorist organizations and transnational organized crime, take
concrete steps to prevent human rights abuses against civilians, put an end to
recruitment and use of child soldiers, cease any activities hampering the return of
State authority and basic social services, and recognize without conditions the unity
and territorial integrity of the Malian State within the framework of the Agreement;
8. Urges all parties in Mali to cooperate fully with the Special Representative
of the Secretary-General (SRSG) and MINUSMA in the implementation of the
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Agreement, as well as to ensure the safety, security and freedom of movement of
MINUSMA’s personnel with unhindered and immediate access throughout the
territory of Mali;
9. Calls for the inclusion within national and regional strategies of programs
to address the stigma of sexual and gender-based violence, bring justice to victims
and survivors, and support their reintegration into their communitie s, and further calls
for the views of the victims and survivors to be taken into account in the design,
establishment, implementation, monitoring and evaluation of these programs;
10. Urges more structured exchanges between the Malian parties between
sessions of the CSA, acknowledges the role of the CSA to reconcile disagreements
between the Malian parties, recalls the provisions of the Pact for Peace signed on
15 October 2018 between the Government of Mali and the United Nations
recognizing the enforceability of the decisions and arbitrations of the international
mediation team in case of divergence in the implementation of the Agreement, and
calls on the members of the CSA and other relevant international partners, to increase
their engagement in support to the implementation of the Agreement in coordination
with the SRSG and MINUSMA;
11. Calls upon the Independent Observer to continue to make public,
including through presentation to the CSA, regular reports containing concrete
recommendations on steps to be taken by all parties to accelerate the full, effective
and inclusive implementation of the Agreement, and further calls upon all parties to
fully cooperate with the Carter Center in order to facilitate the implementation of its
mandate as Independent Observer;
12. Calls upon the Malian parties to agree on and set-up a national mechanism
to follow-up on the recommendations of the International Commission of Inquiry;
13. Encourages all relevant United Nations agencies, as well as bilateral,
regional and multilateral partners to provide the necessary support to contribute to
the implementation of the Agreement by the Malian parties, in particular its
provisions pertaining to sustainable development;
Situation in Central Mali
14. Reiterates that the Malian authorities have primary responsibility to
protect civilians in Mali, urges these authorities to take expedited action to protect
civilians throughout the country, and to prevent, minimize and address civilian harm
that might result from operations undertaken by the MDSF;
15. Urges the Malian authorities to fulfil the following priority measures
before the end of MINUSMA’s current mandate:
– agree on and effectively implement a comprehensive politically -led strategy
guided by clear steps and indicators, to protect civilians, reduce intercommunal
violence, and re-establish State presence and authority as well as basic social
services in Central Mali, including civil administrators, internal security forces
(police, gendarmerie, garde nationale), and judicial entities, ensuring their
responsiveness and accountability, and addressing the need for extra protection
for women and children in vulnerable situations and marginalized groups,
– fight against impunity for violations and abuses of human rights and violations
of international humanitarian law, including but not limited to bringing to justice
the individuals accused of perpetrating the massacres that killed hundreds of
civilians in 2019 and 2020, by holding the corresponding tr ials, and by
communicating progress to the people of Mali, including the families of victims,
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– disarm without delay all militias, reinforce reconciliation initiatives, and
advance community violence reduction efforts;
16. Encourages the Malian authorities, with the help of their partners, to
continue pursuing sustainable and inclusive socio-economic development in Central
Mali, notably through development projects on education, infrastructures, and public
health, with a special attention to youth;
MINUSMA’s mandate
General principles
17. Decides to extend the mandate of MINUSMA until 30 June 2022;
18. Decides that MINUSMA shall continue to comprise up to 13,289 military
personnel and 1,920 police personnel;
19. Requests the Secretary-General, in light of the growing level of insecurity
and physical violence against the civilian populations in Central Mali, to provide no
later than 15 July 2021, a report on the progress of the Force Adaptation Plan
implementation and recommendations on the force levels and ceiling of MINUSMA
uniformed personnel, including planning assumptions and estimated costs, suggesting
deployment phases and providing a detailed description and a timeline for the
necessary new infrastructure works, information on how this w ould extend the field
capability of MINUSMA, and how it would accompany a government -led strategy
for the Centre, and expresses its intent to discuss MINUSMA’s force level based on
this proposal;
20. Authorizes MINUSMA to use all necessary means to carry out its mandate;
21. Decides that the primary strategic priority of MINUSMA is to support the
implementation of the Agreement by the Malian parties, as well as by other relevant
Malian stakeholders, and the Political Transition, and further decides that the second
strategic priority of MINUSMA is to facilitate the implementation by Malian actors
of a comprehensive politically-led strategy to protect civilians, reduce intercommunal
violence, and re-establish State presence, State authority and basic social services in
Central Mali, through the implementation of its mandated tasks;
22. Stresses that MINUSMA’s mandate should be implemented based on a
prioritization of tasks established in paragraphs 21 above and 30 and 31 below,
requests the Secretary-General to reflect this prioritization in the deployment of the
mission and to align budgetary resources accordingly, while ensuring appropriate
resources for the implementation of the mandate, affirms, in this regard, that the
support to the implementation of the Agreement and to the full realization of the
Political Transition should be given priority in decisions about the use of available
capacity and resources, that the SRSG, in consultation with the Force Commander
and the Police Commissioner should be given sufficient flexibility to deploy
MINUSMA contingents between sectors to rapidly respond, in line with MINUSMA’s
mandate, to the dynamic security situation in both North and Central Mali, that the
SRSG, in consultation with the Force Commander, should ensure that sufficient
mission resources are allocated to the implementation of the second strategic priority;
23. Requests MINUSMA to continue to carry out its mandate with a proactive,
robust, flexible and agile posture;
24. Requests MINUSMA to ensure the safety, security and freedom of
movement of United Nations and associated personnel, to protect installations and
equipment, and, in this context, to periodically review all safety and security
measures;
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25. Expresses its full support to the continuation of the implementation of
MINUSMA’s adaptation plan, requests the Secretary-General to take all appropriate
measures to accelerate this implementation, notably in generating required assets, and
encourages Member states to contribute to the plan by providing the capabilities
needed for its success, particularly air assets;
26. Encourages the Secretary-General to implement and keep under
continuous update the integrated strategic framework setting the United Nations’
overall vision, joint priorities and internal division of labour to sustain peace in Mali,
including enhanced coordination with donors, requests the Secretary-General to
ensure an efficient division of tasks and complementarity of efforts between
MINUSMA, its Trust Fund, the Peacebuilding Fund, the United Nations Country
Team (UNCT), and other UN entities based on their mandates and comparative
advantages as well as to continuously adjust their deployment according to the
progress made in the implementation of MINUSMA’s mandate, while stressing th e
importance of adequate resources and capacity for the UNCT, underscores the critical
nature of enhanced UNCT presence and activity in the Northern and Central regions
of Mali to facilitate integration across the UN system and longer term peacebuilding,
and calls on Member States and relevant organizations to consider providing the
necessary voluntary funding to this end;
27. Requests MINUSMA to increase its efforts to improve coordination
between its civil, military and police components, by reinforcing its integrated
approach to operational planning and intelligence as well as through intra -mission
dedicated coordination mechanisms;
28. Requests the Secretary-General to continue to ensure close coordination
and information sharing, where appropriate, between MINUSMA, the United Nations
Office for West Africa and the Sahel (UNOWAS), sub-regional organizations,
including ECOWAS and the G5 Sahel, as well as Member States in the region;
29. Requests MINUSMA to improve its communication efforts to raise
awareness on its mandate and its role, as well as to underscore the role and
responsibilities of the Malian authorities to protect civilians and implement the
Agreement;
Priority tasks
30. Decides that MINUSMA’s mandate shall include the following priority
tasks:
(a) Support to the implementation of the Agreement on Peace and
Reconciliation in Mali and to the full realization of the Political Transition
(i) To exercise the SRSG’s good offices, confidence-building, facilitation of
dialogue and mediation at the national and local levels, in order to support
dialogue with and among all stakeholders towards reconciliation and social
cohesion, to encourage and support the full implementation of the Agreement,
notably by heading the Secretariat of the CSA, and to support the full realization
of the Political Transition;
(ii) To support the implementation of the political and institutional reforms
provided by the Agreement, especially in its Part II, notably to support the
Government’s efforts for the effective restoration and extension of State
authority and rule of law throughout the territory, including through supporting
the effective functioning of interim administrations in the North of M ali under
the conditions set out in the Agreement;
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(iii) To support the implementation of the defence and security measures of the
Agreement, especially its Part III and Annex 2, notably:
– to support, monitor and supervise the ceasefire, including throu gh the continued
implementation of control measures on movement and armament of signatory
armed groups, including in designated weapon-free areas, and to report to the
Security Council on violations of it,
– to support the cantonment, disarmament, demobilization and reintegration of
armed groups, including through the integration of elements of the signatory
armed groups in the MDSF as an interim measure, and the continued
implementation of a community violence reduction program, within the
framework of an inclusive and consensual reform of the security sector, taking
into account the particular needs of women and children, and persons belonging
to marginalised groups such as people with disabilities, and without prejudice
to the anticipated plans of the demobilization, disarmament and reintegration
and integration commissions,
– to support the establishment by all relevant Malian parties of a comprehensive
plan for the redeployment of the reformed and reconstituted MDSF in the North
of Mali, including with a view to them assuming responsibility for security, and
to support such redeployment including through operational, logistical and
transportation support during coordinated and joint operations, planning,
strengthened information sharing, and medical evacuation, within existing
resources, without prejudice to the basic principles of peacekeeping,
– to ensure coherence of international efforts, in close collaboration with other
bilateral partners, donors and international organizations, including the
European Union, engaged in these fields, to rebuild the Malian security sector,
within the framework set out by the Agreement;
(iv) To support the implementation of the reconciliation and justice measures
of the Agreement, especially in its Part V, including to support the operations of
the Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Commission and the follow -up of the
recommendations of the International Commission of Inquiry, and to help
ensuring the effectiveness of justice and corrections officials as well as Malian
judicial institutions, particularly regarding the detention, investigation and
prosecution of individuals suspected of, and sentencing of those found
responsible for terrorism-related crimes, mass atrocities and transnational
organized crime activities (including trafficking in persons, arms, drugs and
natural resources, and the smuggling of migrants);
(v) To encourage and support the full implementation of the Agreement by the
Malian parties, and all relevant non-signatory actors, including by promoting
the meaningful participation of civil society, including women’s organizations,
women peacebuilders, and youth organizations and youth peacebuilders, and
helping the Government of Mali to raise awareness on the content and the
objectives of the Agreement;
(vi) To assist the Malian authorities, together with the UNCT, in the holding of
free and fair elections, conducted in a peaceful environment and a transparent
and inclusive manner, including regional, local, legislative and presidential
elections, and, as appropriate, of a constitutional referendum, consistent with
the electoral calendar, with presidential elections scheduled for 27 February
2022, and with the full, equal and meaningful participation of women, and
inclusion of youth, refugees and internally displaced persons, including through
the provision of technical assistance and security arrangements to achieve
sustainable peace;
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(b) Support to stabilization and restoration of State authority in the Centre
(i) To support Malian authorities in agreeing on and implementing a
comprehensive politically-led strategy to protect civilians, reduce
intercommunal violence, and re-establish State presence, State authority and
basic social services in Central Mali, and meeting the priority measures set -out
in paragraph 15 above;
(ii) To facilitate the return of State presence, State authority and basic social
services in the Centre, ensuring strengthened coordination between the civilian
and military components of the mission, and with local and regional
communities, groups and military and civilian authorities, and to support the
redeployment of the MDSF there, including through continued operational,
logistical and transportation support during coordinated and joint operations, on
the basis of clear, coherent and dynamic planning, strengthened information and
intelligence sharing and medical evacuation, within existing resources;
(iii) To support Malian authorities in ensuring that those responsible for
violations and abuses of human rights and violations of international
humanitarian law are held accountable and brought to justice without delay;
(c) Protection of civilians
(i) To protect, without prejudice to the primary responsibility of the Malian
authorities, civilians under threat of physical violence;
(ii) In support of the Malian authorities, to take active steps to anticipate, deter
and effectively respond to threats to the civilian population, notably in the North
and Center of Mali, through a comprehensive and integrated approach, and, in
this regard:
– to promote understanding of and strengthen mission-wide early warning and
response mechanisms and to systematically record and analyse MINUSMA’s
rate of response,
– to strengthen community engagement and protection mechanisms, including
interaction with civilians, community outreach, reconciliation, mediation,
support to the resolution of local and intercommunal conflicts and public
information,
– to take mobile, flexible, robust and proactive steps to protect civilians, including
through the set-up of a Mobile Task Force, prioritizing the deployment of
ground and air assets, as available, in areas where civilians are most at risk,
while expecting Malian authorities to assume their responsibilities in the
respective areas,
– to mitigate the risk to civilians before, during and after any military or police
operation, including by tracking, preventing, minimizing, and addressing
civilian harm resulting from the mission’s operations,
– to prevent the return of active armed elements to key populat ion centres and
other areas where civilians are at risk, engaging in direct operations pursuant
only to serious and credible threats;
(iii) To provide specific protection and assistance for women and children
affected by armed conflict, including through Protection Advisors, Child
Protection Advisors, Women Protection Advisors and civilian and uniformed
Gender Advisors and focal points, as well as consultations with women’s
organizations, and address the needs of victims and survivors of sexual and
gender-based violence in armed conflict;
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(d) Promotion and protection of human rights
(i) To assist the Malian authorities in their efforts to promote and protect
human rights, in particular in the areas of justice and reconciliation, including to
support, as feasible and appropriate, the efforts of the Malian authorities, without
prejudice to their responsibilities, to bring to justice without undue delay those
responsible for serious violations or abuses of human rights or violations of
international humanitarian law, in particular war crimes and crimes against
humanity in Mali, taking into account the referral by the transitional authorities
of Mali of the situation in their country since January 2012 to the ICC;
(ii) To improve efforts to monitor, document, conduct fact -finding missions,
help investigate and report publicly and regularly to the Security Council, on
violations of international humanitarian law and on violations and abuses of
human rights, including all forms of sexual and gender-based violence,
trafficking in persons, and violations and abuses committed against women and
children throughout Mali and to contribute to efforts to prevent such violations
and abuses including by liaising with relevant partner s, as appropriate;
(e) Humanitarian assistance
In support of the Malian authorities, to contribute to the creation of a secure
environment for the safe civilian-led delivery of humanitarian assistance, consistent
with humanitarian principles, and the voluntary, safe and dignified return, local
integration or resettlement of internally displaced persons and refugees in close
coordination with humanitarian actors, including relevant UN agencies;
Other tasks
31. Further authorizes MINUSMA, without impeding on its capacity to
implement its priority tasks, to use its existing capacities to assist in implementing
the following other tasks in a streamlined and sequenced manner, bearing in mind that
priority and secondary tasks are mutually reinforcing:
(a) Quick impact projects
To contribute to the creation of a secure environment for quick impact projects
in direct support to the implementation of the Agreement in the North or in response
to specific needs in the Centre on the basis of strong conflict analysis;
(b) Cooperation with Sanctions Committees
To assist and exchange information with the Sanctions Committee and the Panel
of experts established pursuant to resolution 2374 (2017) as well as to assist in raising
awareness on their role and their mandate;
To assist the 1267/1989/2253 ISIL (Da’esh) and Al-Qaida Sanctions Committee
and the Analytical Support and Sanctions Monitoring Team established by resolution
1526 (2004), including by passing information relevant to the implementation of the
measures in paragraph 1 of resolution 2368 (2017);
(c) Weapons and ammunition management
To assist the Malian authorities with the removal and destruction of mines and other
explosive devices and weapons and ammunition management, within existing resources;
Other security presences in Mali and the Sahel region
32. Requests the Secretary-General to ensure adequate coordination, exchange
of information and, when applicable, support, within their respective mandates and
through existing mechanisms, between MINUSMA, the MDSF, the FC -G5S, the
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French Forces and the European Union missions in Mali as well as coordination with
European partners, including Task Force Takuba, and further requests MINUSMA to
convene regular meetings of the Instance de Coordination au Mali as the main
platform for such coordination, exchange of information and support an d to also use
this platform to assist Mali in getting an encompassing view of the actions undertaken
by these security presences, within existing resources;
33. Stresses that security responses to the threats faced by Mali can only be
effective if conducted in full compliance with international law, and while taking
feasible precautions to minimize the risk of harm to civilians in all areas of operations,
and calls upon all non-United Nations security forces receiving support from
MINUSMA to continue cooperating with the United Nations and the relevant
monitoring and reporting mechanisms in implementing the Human Rights Due
Diligence Policy on United Nations support to non-United Nations security forces
(HRDDP);
Malian Defence and Security Forces
34. Urges MINUSMA and the Government of Mali to redouble their efforts
towards ensuring a swift, full and effective implementation of the Memorandum of
Understanding on support to the redeployment of MDSF;
35. Encourages bilateral and multilateral partners to continue their support to
accelerate the redeployment of the MDSF to the Centre and, once reformed and
reconstituted, to the North of Mali, particularly by providing relevant equipment and
training, in coordination with the Government of Mali and MINUSMA and w ithin the
framework of the Agreement;
36. Expresses serious concerns about repeated allegations of violations of
international human rights law and international humanitarian law by MDSF in the
conduct of counterterrorism operations, takes positive note of the measures
announced by the Government of Mali in response to these allegations, and urges the
Government of Mali to effectively implement these measures, notably by carrying out
transparent, credible and timely investigations and holding accountable t hose
responsible, especially as it relates to the allegations documented by the MINUSMA
Human Rights Division;
37. Calls upon the Government of Mali to implement all recommendations
made by MINUSMA in the framework of the HRDDP, and encourages international
partners to insist on respect for international human rights law, international
humanitarian law and accountability as a necessary condition when partnering with
the MDSF or other armed actors;
Force conjointe du G5 Sahel
38. Welcomes the increased autonomy of the G5 Sahel Executive Secretariat
and of the FC-G5S as steps towards self-sufficiency, encourages G5 Sahel States to
ensure that the FC-G5S continues to scale up its level of operation in order to
demonstrate increased tangible operational results, further welcomes the launch of
the Civilian Casualties Identification, Tracking and Analysis Cell (MISAD) by the
FC-G5S, as part of its implementation of the compliance framework referred to in
resolution 2391 (2017), encourages support to the G5 Sahel programmes, including
its police component and Specialized Investigative Units;
39. Expresses its support for support provided by MINUSMA to the FC-G5S,
as per the conditions set out in resolutions 2391 (2017) and 2531 (2020), and in the
technical agreement between the United Nations, the European Union and the G5
Sahel, through MEDEVAC and CASEVAC, access to life support consumables, and
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use of engineering plant equipment, material and enabling units, without affecting
MINUSMA’s capacity to implement its mandate and strategic priorities referenced in
paragraph 21;
40. Stresses that operational and logistical support from MINUSMA, as per
the conditions set by resolution 2391 (2017), is a temporary but vital measure which
has the potential to allow the FC-G5S, given its current level of capacities, to enhance
its ability to deliver on its mandate, calls on the FC-G5S to continue developing its
own capacity to support itself, encourages a more robust examination of alternative
support to the FC-G5S with detailed and operational options of this support, including
through bilateral and multilateral mechanisms and organisations, other than
MINUSMA and with consideration of all appropriate funding options, and requests
the Secretary-General to include these as well as an assessment of the implem entation
of paragraph 13 of resolution 2391 (2017), including on the HRDDP, in a report to be
issued no later than 30 September 2021, without prejudice to any future Security
Council decision;
41. Requests the Secretary-General to enhance exchange of information
between MINUSMA and the G5 Sahel States, through provision of relevant
intelligence;
42. Recalls that adherence to the compliance framework referred to in
resolution 2391 (2017) is essential in ensuring the required trust among the
populations, and thus the effectiveness and legitimacy of the FC -G5S, and underlines
the need for the continued support of UN OHCHR to the compliance framewor k's full
operationalization;
French forces
43. Authorizes French forces, within the limits of their capacities and areas of
deployment, to use all necessary means until the end of MINUSMA’s mandate as
authorized in this resolution, to intervene in sup port of elements of MINUSMA when
under imminent and serious threat upon request of the Secretary -General, and
requests France to report to the Council on the implementation of this mandate in
Mali and to coordinate its reporting with the reporting by the S ecretary-General
referred to in paragraph 61 below;
European Union contribution
44. Encourages the European Union, notably its Special Representative for
the Sahel and its EUTM Mali and EUCAP Sahel Mali missions, to continue its efforts
to support Malian authorities in Security Sector Reform and reestablishment of State
authority and presence throughout the Malian territory, further encourages close
coordination of these efforts with MINUSMA, and requests the Secretary-General to
enhance cooperation between MINUSMA and EUTM Mali and EUCAP Sahel
missions, including by developing further complementarity between the missions and
by exploring modalities for potential mutual support;
Capacities of MINUSMA, safety and security of MINUSMA’s personnel
45. Stresses the importance to provide MINUSMA with the necessary
capacities to fulfill its mandate in a complex security environment that includes
asymmetric threats to its personnel and requests the Secretary-General, Member
States, and the Government of Mali to take all appropriate measures to ensure the best
level possible of safety and security of MINUSMA’s personnel, in line with resolution
2518 (2020), and principles to guide the COVID-19 vaccination of uniformed
personnel in-theatre and prior to deployment in line with UN guidelines and best
practices to improve safety of peacekeepers, recalling as well the Action Plan on
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improving safety and security related to the report on “Improving Security of United
Nations Peacekeepers”;
46. 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, urges Member States to provide
troops and police that have adequate capabilities, including regarding language skills,
predeployment and, where appropriate, in situ training, and equipment, including
enablers, specific to the operating environment, requests troop and police contributing
countries to implement relevant provisions of resolution 2538 (2020) notes the
potential adverse effects on mandate implementation of national caveats which have
not been declared and accepted by the Secretary General prior to deployment,
highlights that lack of effective command and control, refusal to obey orders, failure
to respond to attacks on civilians, declining to participate in or undertake patrols may
adversely affect the shared responsibility for effective mandate implementation, and
calls on Members State to declare all national caveats, provide troops and police with
the minimum of declared caveats, and to fully and effectively implement the
provisions of the Memoranda of Understanding (MoU) signed with the United
Nations;
47. Requests the Secretary-General to implement the following capacities and
existing obligations in the planning and conduct of MINUSMA’s operations:
– to implement peacekeeping performance requirements under resolutions 2378
(2017) and 2436 (2018),
– to improve MINUSMA’s intelligence and analysis capacities, including
surveillance and monitoring capacities, within the limits of its mandate,
– to provide training, knowledge and equipment to counter explosive devices,
including enhanced support to troop and police contributing countries to deploy
the environment specific mine-protected vehicles needed under the current
Force requirements,
– to improve logistics in mission, in particular by taking all necessary measures
to secure MINUSMA’s logistical supply routes, including through the continued
deployment of combat convoy battalions and the use of modern technology such
as multiple sensors, intelligence fusion and unmanned aerial systems, as well as
by exploring potential alternative logistical supply routes,
– to enhance camps protection, including through the urgent deployment, where
needed, of appropriate technology systems, such as indirect fire atta ck, early
warning devices, and ground alert radars,
– to implement more effective casualty and medical evacuation procedures,
including the Standard Operating Procedure on Decentralized Casualty
Evacuation, as well as deploying enhanced medical evacuation capacities,
– to take active and effective measures to improve the planning and functioning
of MINUSMA’s safety and security facilities and arrangements,
– to secure long-term rotation schemes for critical capabilities as well as exploring
innovative options to promote partnerships between equipment, troop- and
police-contributing countries;
– to strengthen the implementation of mission-wide early warning and response,
as part of a coordinated approach to information gathering, incident tracking
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and analysis, monitoring, verification, early warning and dissemination, and
response mechanisms;
–- to ensure that any of its support to other security presences mentioned in
paragraph 32 above is provided in strict compliance with the HRDDP;
– to strengthen its sexual and gender-based violence prevention and response
activities in line with resolution 2467 (2019);
– to implement resolution 1325 (2000) and all resolutions addressing women,
peace, and security, including by seeking to increase the number of women in
MINUSMA in line with resolution 2538 (2020), taking fully into account gender
considerations as a cross-cutting issue throughout its mandate;
– to take fully into account child protection as a cross-cutting issue;
– to implement youth, peace and security under resolution 2250 (2015), 2419
(2018) and 2535 (2020);
– to implement the United Nations zero-tolerance policy on serious misconduct,
sexual exploitation and abuse, and sexual harassment, and all actions under
resolution 2272 (2016), and to report to the Security Council if such cases of
misconduct occur;
48. Strongly condemns all attacks against MINUSMA peacekeepers and other
United Nations and associated personnel, underlines that these attacks may constitute
war crimes under international law, stresses that those responsible for these acts
should be held accountable, calls on the Government of Mali to take all possible
measures to swiftly investigate, arrest, prosecute and bring to justice the perpetrators
of such acts, with a view to prevent impunity from encouraging future violence
against peacekeepers, calls upon MINUSMA to provide support to the Government
of Mali to this end, requests the Secretary-General to regularly include in its reports
information on the efforts of Mali in that regard, and further requests the Secretary-General to ensure troop contributing countries receive sufficient information relevan t
to up-to-date tactics, techniques, and procedures in reducing troop casualties in an
asymmetric environment before deploying to Mali;
49. Calls upon Member States, especially those in the region, to ensure the
free, unhindered and expeditious movement to and from Mali of all personnel, as well
as equipment, provisions, supplies and other goods, which are for the exclusive and
official use of MINUSMA, in order to facilitate the timely and cost-effective delivery
of the logistical supply of MINUSMA;
Obligations under international law, human rights law and related aspects
50. Urges the Malian authorities to reinforce efforts to strengthen
accountability and ensure that all those responsible for crimes involving violations
and abuses of human rights and violations of international humanitarian law,
including those involving sexual and gender based violence, and human trafficking,
are held accountable and brought to justice without undue delay, that progress and
conclusions of investigations and trials are effectively communicated, and that all
victims and survivors of sexual violence in conflict and post-conflict situations have
access to justice, and notes, in this regard, the Malian authorities’ continued
cooperation with the ICC, in accordance with Mali’s obligations under the Rome
Statute, in matters that are within its jurisdiction;
51. Urges all parties to comply with obligations under international
humanitarian law to respect and protect all civilians, including humanitarian
personnel and civilian objects, as well as all medical personnel and humanitarian
personnel exclusively engaged in medical duties, their means of transport and
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equipment, as well as hospitals and other medical facilities, and take all required steps
to allow and facilitate the full, safe, immediate and unimpeded access of humanitarian
actors for the delivery of humanitarian assistance to all people in need, while
respecting the humanitarian principles and applicable international law;
52. Reaffirms its past resolutions on the Protection of civilians in armed
conflicts including resolution 1894 (2009), Children and armed conflicts, Women,
peace and security, and Youth, peace and security, calls upon all military forces
operating in Mali to take them into account and to abide by international humanitarian
law, international human rights law and refugee law, as applicable, and recalls the
importance of training in this regard;
53. Welcomes the adoption by the Malian authorities of a third action plan to
implement resolution 1325 (2000), requests MINUSMA to assist the Malian
authorities in ensuring the full, equal and meaningful participation, involvement and
representation of women at all levels in the implementation of the Agreement,
including the security sector reform and DDR processes, as well as in reconciliation,
Political Transition and electoral processes, and calls on the Malian parties to address
the need for extra protection for women and children in vulnerable situations as a
cross-cutting issue;
54. Urges all parties to implement the conclusions on Children And Armed
Conflict in Mali adopted by the Security Council working group on 17 December
2020 and to immediately release, without preconditions, all children from their ranks,
hand them over to relevant civilian child protection actors, end and prevent further
recruitment and use of children, and to ensure that the protection of children’s rights
is taken into account in the implementation of the Agreement, in DDR processes and
in security sector reform, encourages the Government of Mali to continue its efforts
to strengthen the legal framework on child protection, including through adherence
to its obligations under the Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the
Child on the involvement of children in armed conflict, the fin alization of the
revisions of the Child Protection Code, the implementation of commitments it made
in endorsing the Safe Schools Declaration and a mapping of schools that have been
closed, targeted or threatened, and urges all armed groups to establish and implement
action plans to end and prevent all six grave violations against children, as identified
by the Secretary-General, including the recruitment and use of children and sexual
violence against children;
55. Urges all parties to prevent and eliminate sexual violence in conflict and
post-conflict situations, encourages the implementation of the Joint Communiqué on
sexual and gender-based violence signed by the United Nations and the Government
of Mali in March 2019, further encourages Malian authorities to continue to take steps
towards the enactment of the draft law on prevention, prosecution and response to
gender-based violence, calls upon the Plateforme armed group to implement the
commitments contained in its Communiqué sur la prévention des violences sexuelles
liées au conflit au Mali of June 2016 and upon the Coordination armed group to make
similar commitments, and requests MINUSMA to support efforts in this regard,
including supporting the provision of medical, sexual and reproductive health,
psychosocial, mental health, legal and socioeconomic services to all survivors of
sexual violence;
56. Urges troop- and police-contributing countries to continue taking
appropriate action to prevent sexual exploitation and abuse, including vetting,
predeployment and in-mission awareness training, to ensure full accountability in
cases of such conduct involving their personnel, including through timely
investigations of all allegations of sexual exploitation and abuse, to repatriate units
when there is credible evidence of widespread or systemic sexual exploitation and
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abuse by those units, and to report to the United Nations fully and promptly on actions
undertaken;
57. Calls on Member States and international and regional organizations to
respond swiftly to the significant food and humanitarian crisis in Mali through
increased contributions;
Environmental issues
58. Requests MINUSMA to consider the environmental impacts of its
operations when fulfilling its mandated tasks and, in this context, to man age them as
appropriate and in accordance with applicable and relevant General Assembly
resolutions and United Nations rules and regulations;
Small arms, light weapons and explosive ordnance threat mitigation
59. Calls upon the Malian authorities to address the issue of the proliferation
and illicit trafficking of small arms and light weapons, including by ensuring the safe
and effective management, storage and security of their stockpiles and ammunitions
in accordance with the ECOWAS Convention on small arms and light weapons, their
ammunition and other related materials, the United Nations Programme of Action on
Small Arms and Light Weapons and with resolution 2220 (2015);
60. Calls upon the Malian authorities to strengthen cooperation with the
United Nations, regional and sub-regional organizations, civil society, and private
sector in order to give the most appropriate response to explosive ordnance threat;
Reports by the Secretary-General
61. Requests the Secretary-General to report to the Security Council every
three months after the adoption of this resolution on the implementation of this
resolution, focusing on:
(i) progress in achieving the priority measures referenced in paragraphs 4 and
15, and whether and how the mission’s activities have contributed toward
achieving the mission’s strategic priorities referenced in paragraph 21 and
priority tasks referenced in paragraph 30,
(ii) coordination, exchange of information and, when applicable, mutual
operational and logistical support, between MINUSMA, the MDSF, the FC -
G5S, the French Forces and the European partners, including Task Force
Takuba, and the European Union missions in Mali,
(iii) measures to improve external communication of the mission;
62. Further requests the Secretary-General, addressing perspectives from all
relevant actors, including the SRSG, in consultation with the Force Commander, to
provide every six months the Security Council with a letter exclusively and
thoroughly focusing on mission-wide performance and challenges by providing
information on:
(i) progress in mission operations, security challenges, and coordination
between security actors, including discussions in the Instance de Coordination
au Mali,
(ii) overall performance, including implementation of the Adaptation Plan,
roll out of the Integrated Peacekeeping Performance and Accountability
Framework (IPPAF) and the Comprehensive Planning Performance Assessment
System (CPPAS), the improvement and the performance of the Casualty
Evacuation System, rotations of uniformed personnel, on the basis of the
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methodology referred to in paragraph 47, including information on undeclared
caveats, declining to participate in or undertake p atrols and their impact on the
mission, and how the reported cases of under-performance are addressed,
(iii) integration of all mission’s components, including an update on the
implementation of the integrated strategic framework referred to in paragraph
26 above, encouraging that this framework also includes a transition plan in line
with the SG’s roadmap of 25 March 2021 with a view to handing over relevant
tasks in the long-term, in a phased, coordinated and deliberate manner, to Malian
authorities, the UNCT and other UN entities based on their mandates and
comparative advantages as well as on a mapping of capabilities and gaps, and a
resource mobilization strategy that involves the full range of multilateral and
bilateral partners;
63. Decides to remain actively seized of the matter.
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