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This resolution extended the mandate of UNDOF until 31 December 2005. [7] 1636: 31 October 2005 Unanimous Assassination of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafic Hariri: 2042: 14 April 2012 Unanimous The Syrian Civil War observer force resolution 2043: 21 April 2012 Unanimous Establishes of the United Nations Supervision Mission in Syria: 2059: ...
In addition, the Olof Skoog, Permanent Observer for the European Union, regretted the use of vetoes against the U.N. Security Council resolution, the representatives of State of Palestine, Turkey, Qatar, Syria, Ghana, France, Russia, Iran, and Egypt noted their support of the resolution, while Jamaican representative Brian Christopher Manley ...
Expresses its intention to review Syria's implementation of this resolution within 30 days and to consider its options, including measures under Article 41 of the United Nations Charter (complete or partial interruption of economic relations and of rail, sea, air, postal, telegraphic, radio, and other means of communication, and the severance ...
The provisions of the resolution, adopted under Chapter VII of the United Nations Charter, included; [3] A new sanctions regime targeting the Taliban and associates; Afghan-Taliban individuals listed under the list of sanctioned individuals created after Resolution 1267 were moved to the new sanctions list created by the current resolution;
The U.N.'s Syria envoy urged an inclusive Syrian transition based on a nine-year-old Security Council resolution during a meeting with the commander of Syria's new administration, Ahmed al-Sharaa ...
The United Nations Security Council Resolution 2254 was unanimously adopted on 18 December 2015. It called for a ceasefire and political settlement in Syria as a means to end the civil war . [ 2 ] The document described the roadmap for Syria's political transition.
The Lebanese government requested that the investigation be extended, and that an international tribunal be established to try those responsible for the attack. [3] The Council recognised that Syria had made officials available for questioning, but remained concerned at the overall performance of the Syrian authorities to the investigation.
On 12 October 2022, the United Nations General Assembly, which required a two-thirds majority, adopted the resolution with 143 countries voting in favour, 5 voting against and 35 abstaining. [ 12 ] The resolution achieved the most votes in favour out of all resolutions adopted during the 11th Emergency Special Session of the General Assembly ...