United Nations Security Council Resolution 714 Explained

Number:714
Organ:SC
Date:30 September
Year:1991
Meeting:3,010
Code:S/RES/714
Document:https://undocs.org/S/RES/714(1991)
For:15
Abstention:0
Against:0
Subject:El Salvador
Result:Adopted

United Nations Security Council resolution 714, adopted unanimously on 30 September 1991, after recalling resolutions 637 (1989) and 693 (1991), the Council welcomed the recent signing of the New York Agreement by the Government of El Salvador and the Farabundo Martí National Liberation Front to bring about an end to the ongoing civil war in El Salvador.

The Council commended the work of the Secretary-General, Javier Pérez de Cuéllar, and his Personal Representative for Central America, as well as the efforts of the "Group of Friends" Colombia, Mexico, Spain and Venezuela in the peace process. It also urged the parties that, in the next round of talks scheduled for October 1991, to continue intensive and sustained negotiations in order to reach a ceasefire at the earliest possible date, further calling for restraint and co-operation with the United Nations Observer Mission in El Salvador.

The New York Agreement, signed on 25 September 1991 at the United Nations Headquarters, provided guarantees for a solution to the situation in El Salvador. Provisions included the establishment of the National Commission for the Consolidation of Peace (COPAZ), responsible for overseeing all political agreements reached by both parties and endorsed by the Security Council.[1]

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Notes and References

  1. Book: United Nations: Department of Political Affairs. Repertoire of the Practice of the Security Council: Supplement 1989–1992. United Nations Publications. 1989. 373. 978-92-1-137030-0.