United Nations Security Council Resolution 1854 Explained

Number:1854
Organ:SC
Date:19 December
Year:2008
Meeting:6,051
Code:S/RES/1851
Document:https://undocs.org/S/RES/1854(2008)
For:15
Abstention:0
Against:0
Subject:The situation in Liberia
Result:Adopted

United Nations Security Council Resolution 1854 was unanimously adopted on 19 December 2008.

Resolution

Welcoming what it called the sustained progress made by the Government of Liberia in rebuilding the country for its citizens, the Security Council renewed restrictions imposed in 2003 on the import of arms and the travel of persons that had threatened the peace there for another 12 months.

Through the unanimous adoption of resolution 1854 (2008), the council also renewed until 20 December 2009 the mandate of the Expert Panel that helped monitor the implementation, violation and effectiveness of the sanctions, and requested the Secretary-General to reappoint its current members.

It encouraged the Government of Liberia to continue to cooperate with the Panel and to continue to implement the recommendations of the 2008 review team on the Kimberley Process, a mechanism established to keep ā€œblood diamondsā€ from reaching world markets.[1]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: SECURITY COUNCIL RENEWS LIBERIA ARMS EMBARGO, TRAVEL BAN, ALSO APPROVES ONE-YEAR EXTENSION OF EXPERT MONITORING PANEL. December 19, 2008. United Nations.